Evaluation of 60 chemicals in a preliminary developmental toxicity test

Hardin, BD; Schuler, RL; Burg, , JR; Booth, GM; Hazelden, KP; Mackenzie, KM; Piccirillo, VJ; Smith, KN

HERO ID

62212

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1987

Language

English

PMID

2884741

HERO ID 62212
In Press No
Year 1987
Title Evaluation of 60 chemicals in a preliminary developmental toxicity test
Authors Hardin, BD; Schuler, RL; Burg, , JR; Booth, GM; Hazelden, KP; Mackenzie, KM; Piccirillo, VJ; Smith, KN
Journal Teratogenesis, Carcinogenesis, and Mutagenesis
Volume 7
Issue 1
Page Numbers 29-48
Abstract The number of chemicals in commerce which have not been evaluated for potential developmental toxicity is large. Because of the time and expense required by conventional developmental toxicity tests, an abbreviated assay is needed that will preliminarily evaluate otherwise untested chemicals to help prioritize them for conventional testing. A proposed short-term in vivo assay has been used in a series of studies in which a total of 60 chemicals were tested. Some were independently tested two or four times each. In this preliminaly test, pregnant mice were dosed during mid-pregnancy and were then allowed to deliver litters. Litter size, birth weight, and neonatal growth and survival to postnatal day 3 were recorded as indices of potential developmental toxicity. Results in this assay and conventional mouse teratology tests were generally concordant. Conventional data were available for 14 chemicals (ten teratogens, one fetotoxin, three nonteratogens), of which 11 (nine teratogens, one fetotoxin, one nonteratogen) produced evidence of developmental toxicity. This included conventional data for three chemicals (ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol dimethyl ether, and triethylene glycol dimethyl ether) that were untested before the present study. As high priority candidates for conventional testing on the basis of results here, all were subsequently studied in a standard teratology assay and were confirmed to be teratogenic in mice. Additionally, one of them (ethylene glycol) plus a fourth high priority candidate for conventional study (diethylene glycol monomethyl ether) were subsequently tested in rats and were found to be teratogenic in that species.
Doi 10.1002/tcm.1770070106
Pmid 2884741
Wosid WOS:A1987G710300005
Url http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/tcm.1770070106/abstract
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Teratog. Carcinog. Mutagen. 7: 29-48.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword in vivo screen; teratogen; hazard detection; rodent; pregnancy outcome; neonatal viability
Is Peer Review Yes
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