Abstract

Prenatal toxicity studies with N, N-dimethylformamide (DMF) in rabbits, rats and mice were carried out using the oral (gavage), dermal, inhalation and ip injection routes of administration. Administration of DMF by gavage led to an increase in malformations in rats and mice in the absence of overt maternal toxicity. The lowest-observable-effect level was 182 mg/kg body weight/day in mice and 166 mg/kg body weight/day in rats. After dermal administration a dose-dependent incidence of teratogenicity was observed in rats at 94–944 mg/kg/body weight/day in the absence of overt maternal toxicity. In rabbits dermal administration led to a steeper increase in the dose-response relationship and at 400 mg/kg body weight/day to a clear teratogenic effect in the presence of slight maternal toxicity. The 200 mg/kg body weight/day dose appeared to be the no-adverse-effect level. Inhalation in rats caused foetotoxicity and embryolethality at 287 ppm. A clear teratogenic effect was shown in rabbits at 450 ppm and a marginal effect at 150 ppm. The no-effect level for does and foetuses was 50 ppm. Ip injection in mice caused clear teratogenicity at 944 mg/kg body weight/day and slight embryotoxicity at 378 mg/kg body weight/day. The rabbit appears to be more sensitive than the rat to DMF-related prenatal toxicity and should, therefore, be used as the basis for the evaluation of teratogenic risk in humans.

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