The international validation study of the acute toxic class method (oral)
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Archives of Toxicology
- Vol. 69 (10) , 659-670
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s002040050229
Abstract
An alternative to the oral LD50 test, the acute toxic class (ATC) method (oral), was validated with 20 substances in an international collaborative study with nine laboratories in five countries. The ATC method is a stepwise procedure with the use of three animals per step. It has been designed with three fixed doses (25, 200 and 2000 mg/kg). In general, this testing is sufficient for allocation to the toxicity classes of the majority of the international classification systems currently in use. The selection of testing at additional fixed doses (5, 50 and 500 mg/kg) may be considered if further refinement is necessary or for specific allocation to those international classification systems with a cut-off value of 5 mg/kg. On average, two to four steps are necessary to complete a test. With the ATC method substances can be ranked in a similar or even better manner than with an LD50 test but it uses up to 90% fewer animals, the average being 70% fewer. This also results in substantially fewer moribund/dead animals. The ATC method is based on biometric evaluations that, together with the experimental results, demonstrate that this method is a sensitive and reliable alternative to the LD50 test.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The biometrical evaluation of the OECD modified version of the acute toxic class method (oral)Archives of Toxicology, 1995
- The biometrie evaluation of the acute-toxic-class method (oral)Archives of Toxicology, 1994
- A national validation study of the acute-toxic-class method—an alternative to the LD50 testArchives of Toxicology, 1992
- A simple method for screening assessment of acute toxicity of chemicalsArchives of Toxicology, 1990
- The international validation of a fixed-dose procedure as an alternative to the classical LD50 testFood and Chemical Toxicology, 1990
- Test No. 401: Acute Oral ToxicityPublished by Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) ,1987
- Estimation of acute oral toxicity in rates by determination of the approximate lethal dose rather than the LD50Journal of Applied Toxicology, 1986
- An up-and-down procedure for acute toxicity testingFundamental and Applied Toxicology, 1985
- A new approach to practical acute toxicity testingArchives of Toxicology, 1983
- Significance of the LD50-test for the toxicological evaluation of chemical substancesArchives of Toxicology, 1981