1. Scientific and Regulatory Policy Committee Best Practices: Documentation of Sexual Maturity by Microscopic Evaluation in Nonclinical Safety Studies
- Author
-
Michael S. Thibodeau, Manoj Bhaskaran, Aleksandra Zalewska, Balasubramanian Manickam, Justin D. Vidal, Jonathan Werner, Wendy G. Halpern, Karyn Colman, Sean McKeag, Benjamin Sefing, Darren Fegley, Karen S. Regan, Binod Jacob, Eveline de Rijk, Vimala Vemireddi, George A. Parker, and Hitoshi Kandori
- Subjects
Male ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Best practice ,Documentation ,Toxicology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Toxicity Tests ,Animals ,Humans ,Sexual maturity ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Potential risk ,Nonclinical safety ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Cell Biology ,Regulatory policy ,International working group ,Test (assessment) ,Pathologists ,Policy ,Research Design ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The sexual maturity status of animals in nonclinical safety studies can have a significant impact on the microscopic assessment of the reproductive system, the interpretation of potential test article–related findings, and ultimately the assessment of potential risk to humans. However, the assessment and documentation of sexual maturity for animals in nonclinical safety studies is not conducted in a consistent manner across the pharmaceutical and chemical industries. The Scientific and Regulatory Policy Committee of the Society of Toxicologic Pathology convened an international working group of pathologists and nonclinical safety scientists with expertise in the reproductive system, pathology nomenclature, and Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data requirements. This article describes the best practices for documentation of the light microscopic assessment of sexual maturity in males and females for both rodent and nonrodent nonclinical safety studies. In addition, a review of the microscopic features of the immature, peripubertal, and mature male and female reproductive system and general considerations for study types and reporting are provided to aid the study pathologist tasked with documentation of sexual maturity.
- Published
- 2021