Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine bivariate relationships among cancer slope factor (CSF) and acute toxicity in rats and salmonid fish. Chemicals (n=43) were selected based on the availability of both oral CSF and acute toxicity data (rat oral median lethal dose [LD50] or salmonid median lethal concentration [LC50]). Rat oral LD50, salmonid LC50, and oral CSF data were log-transformed, and a Bonferroni-adjusted alpha level was set at 0.05 for subsequent correlation analysis. A significant correlation was observed between CSF and rat oral LD50 (r=−0.61) but not for CSF and salmonid LC50 (r=−0.29). Moreover, rat and fish acute toxicity were not significantly correlated (r=0.38). The significant correlation between CSF and rat oral LD50 compares favorably with published results reported in related studies. Accordingly, these results support prediction of carcinogenic potency, expressed as oral CSF, based in part on acute toxicity in rats.

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