Abstract

The incidence of spontaneous pregnancy/infant losses is highly variable in long-tailed macaques (cynomolgus monkey), making it potentially difficult to ascertain test item-related effects in developmental toxicity studies. Therefore, pregnancy normograms had been developed by Jarvis et al. [1] to aid in the distinction of normal (e.g. test facility background) versus non-normal pregnancy outcomes. These normograms were mostly derived from embryo-fetal development studies and from PPND studies with a postnatal phase limited to seven days. However, the enhanced pre- and postnatal developmental (ePPND) study paradigm has essentially replaced these former study types. This work aims at providing enhanced normograms (e-normograms) in the context of regulatory ePPND studies. Survival functions for the prenatal phase (286 control pregnancies) and the postnatal phase (222 live infants) were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier estimator. Normograms were generated from survival curves and pseudo-study simulations. Data were available from two test facilities with comparable EU-compliant animal husbandry. Pregnancy duration/outcome as well as survival functions did not differ significantly between test facilities indicating that this husbandry system yields comparable developmental observations across different test facilities, at least in this NHP species. These novel e-normograms were developed for pregnant long-tailed macaques and provide an extended postnatal period up to three months, a new concept of separate normograms for the prenatal and the postnatal period, specific information on the perinatal phase events, a prediction of expected number of live infants for group size management, and the option to evaluate effects on pregnancy duration through distinction of live births and infant losses.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call