Title of article
The case for an upper dose limit of 1000 mg/kg in rodent carcinogenicity tests
Author/Authors
Davies، نويسنده , , Thomas S. and Monro، نويسنده , , Alastair، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages
9
From page
69
To page
77
Abstract
We examined two rodent carcinogenicity data bases comprising 301 chemicals from the US National Toxicology Program (NTP) and 241 pharmaceuticals from the US Physiciansʹ Desk Reference (PDR) to determine the nature of the tumors produced at dose levels >1000 mg/kg (or equivalent dietary concentrations). Ten chemicals increased tumors only at dose levels greater than 1000 mg/kg. For six of these, the lowest dose tested was >1000 mg/kg, so they may be active at dose levels below 1000 mg/kg. One chemical was active in rats and mice, 2 in rats only and 7 in mice only. Four of the chemicals were mutagenic to Salmonella. The tumor types produced by the other six putatively non-genotoxic chemicals suggests that a high dose limit of 1000 mg/kg is appropriate for rodent bioassays. Overtly genotoxic chemicals are no longer routinely subjected to bioassays.
Keywords
bioassay , mice , Rodents , rats , Dose levels , carcinogenicity
Journal title
Cancer Letters
Serial Year
1995
Journal title
Cancer Letters
Record number
1814878
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