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A Study for collecting background data on Wistar Hannover [Crl:WI(Han)] rats in embryo-fetal development studies - comparative data to Sprague Dawley rats

Authors :
Shigeru Hisada
Hiromasa Takashima
Takashi Ikeda
Keiichi Ito
Yoji Miwa
Mika Senuma
Ken-ichi Noritake
Eiji Maki
Taishi Tateishi
Source :
The Journal of Toxicological Sciences. 38:847-854
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Japanese Society of Toxicology, 2013.

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to collect the background data on Wistar Hannover [Crl:WI(Han)] (hereafter Wistar Han) rats in embryo-fetal development studies from the 6 safety research facilities of pharmaceutical companies and contract research organizations. In each facility, 20 or 22 female rats were dosed with vehicle solution during the organogenesis period. As a result, no abnormalities in clinical signs and necropsy findings in dams were found. Body weights and food consumption in dams were lower than those in Sprague Dawley (SD) rats. The number of corpora lutea (13.3 vs. 16.0 in SD) and implantations (11.8 vs. 14.7) were fewer, and fetal body weights (3.66 vs. 3.70) and placental weights (0.42 vs. 0.45) tended to be lower than those in SD rats. Regarding the fetal abnormalities, the incidence of several findings such as the persistent left umbilical artery (10.4% vs. 1.1%) and cervical (5.2% vs. 0.4%), full (7.4% vs. 0.9%) or short supernumerary (64.5% vs. 9.9%) and wavy ribs (6.6% vs. 0.3%) was higher than that in SD rats. Our present study showed that they maintained a sufficient number of live fetuses and the difference in the fetal sex ratio was not observed. In conclusion, Wistar Han rats were considered to be a suitable strain for embryo-fetal development toxicity study. Since the incidence of several abnormalities was higher than that in SD rats, it may be said that to accumulate background control data is important to evaluate the embryo-fetal development toxicity study using Wistar Han rats.

Details

ISSN :
18803989 and 03881350
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Toxicological Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb7f80ccc7a9fa725133ff5c836c3f97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2131/jts.38.847