Abstract

The rabbit prenatal developmental toxicity study is an international testing requirement for the identification and characterisation of the potential hazards of chemicals to human health. The importance of the rabbit for the detection of chemical teratogens is without question. However, the rabbit when used as a laboratory test species presents unique challenges affecting data interpretation. The purpose of this review is to identify the factors which may impact the behaviour of the pregnant rabbit and lead to significant inter-animal variability, confounding interpretation of maternal toxicity. Additionally, the importance of appropriate dose selection is discussed not least because of the conflicting guidance for identifying and defining acceptable maternal toxicity that lack reference to the rabbit in particular. The test guideline prenatal developmental toxicity study is often unable to distinguish between developmental effects as a consequence of maternal toxicity and those that are a direct effect of the test chemical on the offspring yet there is increasing pressure to use the highest possible dose levels to induce significant maternal toxicity which for the rabbit, a species little understood in toxicological terms and one that is highly susceptible to stress, is defined by very few endpoints. Interpretation of study data is further confounded by dose selection yet the developmental effects, even in the presence of maternal toxicity, are being used in Europe as the basis for classifying agents as reproductive hazards and the maternal effects are being used to define key reference values.

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