Abstract

The current OECD guideline for the assessment of eye irritation recommends, within its initial considerations, the use of data from skin irritation tests as a pre-screen to detect the most severely irritating materials, its being assumed that materials that are severely irritating to the skin are also significantly irritating to the eyes. However, analysis of data for 223 materials, tested in this laboratory for both dermal and ocular irritancy, revealed that only 23% of severe eye irritants were also severe skin irritants. This resulted in a significant number of rabbits developing severe ocular effects that had not been predicted from the dermal responses. This study reports the results of an alternative approach for predicting severe eye irritants. The approach was a two-stage in vitro test battery; the first stage was a cytoxicity assay using the K562 cell line; the second was the isolated rabbit eye test. In contrast to the use of skin irritation tests, the in vitro battery was significantly more predictive (83% of severe eye irritants were detected). Although the indicence of false positive responses in the assay precludes its routine use as a replacement for the in vivo rabbit eye test, the test battery provides a powerful aid to reducing animal use and guiding in vivo studies to minimize the severity of effects.

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