Histopathological Studies on the Effect of Taurine Against Etoposide-Induced Acute Liver and Kidney Toxicity in Female Albino Rats

Abstract
Etoposide (ETP) is a topoisomerase Ⅱ (TOP Ⅱ) inhibitor and one of the leading chemotherapeutic drugs for treating a wide variety of tumors. However, ETP induced hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity limits its clinical use. This study aims to investigate the protective potential of taurine (Tau) to mitigated histopathological changes in the liver and kidneys of female albino rats treated with ETP. A total of 18 female rats were divided into three groups; control group, ETP-exposed group received intraperitoneal injection of ETP on the first 3 days of the study for a total cumulative dose of 44 mg/kg to induce hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity, ETP + Tau group received ETP as stated previously with 400 mg/kg/day of Tau via oral gavage for 15 days. Sections from the liver and kidney were evaluated under light microscope and ETP-exposed group revealed vascular congestion, chronic inflammatory cell infiltration predominantly lymphocytes, edema, vacuolar degeneration, atypical cells, pyknosis, and necrosis while liver and kidney sections of rats treated with combination of ETP + Tau group exhibited marked alleviation of the histopathological damage. The study concludes that treatment with ETP induced marked structural damages in the liver and kidney and such morphological damages are effectively diminished by administering Tau.