Tamoxifen induces rapid, reversible atrophy, and metaplasia in mouse stomach

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Abstract

Tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, is widely used in research and clinically in patients. We find that treatment of normal mice with a single ≥3 mg/20 g body weight dose of tamoxifen leads to apoptosis of >90% of all gastric parietal cells (PCs) and metaplasia of zymogenic chief cells within 3 days. Remarkably, gastric histology returns to nearly normal by 3 weeks. Tamoxifen toxicity occurs by oral and intraperitoneal administration, in both sexes, in multiple strains, and does not depend on estrogen, though acid secretion inhibition is partially protective. Thus, substantial gastric toxicity is a heretofore unappreciated tamoxifen side effect. © 2012 AGA Institute.

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Huh, W. J., Khurana, S. S., Geahlen, J. H., Kohli, K., Waller, R. A., & Mills, J. C. (2012). Tamoxifen induces rapid, reversible atrophy, and metaplasia in mouse stomach. Gastroenterology, 142(1). https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2011.09.050

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