Influence of Cause-of-Death Assignment on Time-to-Tumor Analyses in Animal Carcinogenesis Studies2

Abstract
The importance of cause-of-death determination in an animal carcinogenesis study with respect to estimation of time-to-tumor distributions of internally occurring (occult) tumors is discussed. A nontechnical description of time-to-tumor estimation is presented. The information obtained from time-to-tumor estimation when cause-ofdeath designation was used is illustrated for liver tumors in female mice of the inbred strain BALB/cStCrlfC3Hf/Nctr from the ED01 study with N-2-fluorenylacetamide done at the National Center for Toxicological Research. A time-to-tumor analysis of reticulum cell sarcoma data from the same study has provided insight into some difficulties involved in routine case-by-case determination of cause of death. A more flexible system for assigning of cause of death to dead. animals and cause of morbidity to moribund animals is described as a way to improve cause-of-death assignment.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: