Effects of feed restriction on fertility in female rats
- 25 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Birth Defects Research Part B: Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology
- Vol. 74 (5) , 431-441
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bdrb.20060
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Feed restriction with its resultant body weight loss impacts the rodent estrous cycle; however, the manifestation of these changes in a regulatory study design has not been documented. This study reports the effects of feed restriction in the context of an FDA regulatory submission. METHODS: Adult female rats (n=20/group; weighing ∼200 g each) were provided rodent chow ad lib (control) or at 20, 15, 10, or 7.5 g/rat/day (g/day) during a 2‐week pre‐mating phase, throughout the mating phase, and up to gestation day (GD) 7. On GD 8, all animals were provided ad lib feed until necropsy on GD 14. Estrous cyclicity, mating, and fertility parameters were evaluated. RESULTS: Ad lib rats consumed ∼20 and 28 g/day during the pre‐mating and gestation phases, respectively. All measured fertility parameters in the 20 g/day group were similar to control values. In the 15 g/day group, body weight was reduced by 16% at 2 weeks, prolonged diestrus occurred, and fertility was compromised due to reductions in corpora lutea. Within 2 weeks, mean body weight in groups receiving ≤10 g/day was reduced by ≥29% compared to ad lib values, and overt changes in estrous cyclicity, mating, and fertility occurred. The 7.5 g/day group was not sustainable beyond the pre‐mating phase. CONCLUSIONS: For this study type, feed intake at ≤50% ad lib values (≤10 g/day) was inadequate due to the magnitude and rapidity of body weight effects. Estrous parameters appeared slightly more sensitive than functional measures, as body weight changes of ∼16% appeared near the threshold of changing routinely calculated estrous cycle parameters and were later associated with reduced fertility. In general, body weight differences of 10–15% by themselves were not adverse to normal reproduction (20 g/day). Birth Defects Res B 74:431–441, 2005.Keywords
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