Abstract

Timed-pregnant Sprague-Dawley (CD) outbred rats and New Zealand White rabbits were dosed by gavage with methacrylonitrile (MACR) in distilled water during major organogenesis. Rats were dosed on Gestational Days (GD) 6 through 15 (0, 5, 25, or 50 mg MACR/kg/day) and rabbits on GD 6 through 19 (0, 1, 3, or 5 mg MACR/kg/day). Maternal clinical status was monitored daily during treatment. At termination (GD 20, rats; GD 30, rabbits), confirmed-pregnant females (25-26 per group, rats; 17-22 per group, rabbits) were evaluated for clinical status and gestational outcome; each live fetus was examined for external, visceral, and skeletal malformations. In rats, no treatment-related maternal clinical signs or mortality were observed, nor was there any adverse effect on maternal body weight or food or water consumption. At necropsy, absolute, relative, and adjusted maternal liver weight was increased at the mid- and high-dose groups, an effect that may be indicative of induction of hepatic enzymes rather than toxicity. In the absence of any indication of maternal toxicity, the no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) for maternal toxicity in this study was >/=50 mg MACR/kg/day. The NOAEL for developmental toxicity in rats was also >/=50 mg MACR/kg/day. There was no effect of treatment on postimplantation loss, mean fetal body weight per litter, or morphological development. In rabbits, maternal mortality and clinical signs were not dose related. Maternal food consumption, body weight, and liver weight were not adversely affected by treatment. Thus, the maternal NOAEL was >/=5 mg MACR/kg/day. Maternal toxicity, including death, was observed >/=7.5 mg/kg/day in preliminary studies. The developmental NOAEL was also >/=5 mg MACR/kg/day. There was no adverse effect of treatment on postimplantation loss or fetal body weight. A significant decrease in the percentage male fetuses per litter was observed, although there was no effect on total live litter size, suggesting that the reduction in the ratio of live male fetuses in the high-dose group was not biologically significant. MACR had no adverse effect on morphological development. In summary, oral administration of MACR to rats and rabbits during organogenesis, at doses that did not cause persistent maternal toxicity (50 mg MACR/kg/day, rats; 5 mg MACR/kg/day, rabbits), also did not cause any adverse developmental effects.

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