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© 1995 Oxford University Press

research-article

Developmental Toxicity of N-Methylformamide Administered by Gavage to CD Rats and New Zealand White Rabbits1

STEPHANIE L. KELICH*,2, MICHAEL D. MERCIECA{dagger} and RAYMOND C. POHLAND*

*Toxicology Research Laboratories, Lilly Research Laboratories, Division of Eli Lilly and Company Greenfield, Indiana 46140 {dagger}Experimental Pathology Laboratories, Research Triangle Park North Carolina 27709

Received May 25, 1994; accepted April 10, 1995

N-Methylformamide (NMF) is a metabolite of dimethylformamide (DMF), a solvent with wide applications in the chemical industry. The potential developmental toxicity of NMF was evaluated in CD rats and New Zealand white rabbits. Pregnant rats and rabbits were dosed once daily by gavage on Gestation Days 6–15 and 6–18, respectively. Doses for rats were 0, 1, 5, 10, or 75 mg/kg; doses for rabbits were 0, 5, 10, or 50 mg/kg. Cesarean sections were performed on rats and rabbits on Gestation Days 20 and 29, respectively. No treatment-related maternal deaths or clinical signs occurred in either species. Body weight gain and food consumption were depressed in rats given 75 mg/kg and rabbits given 50 mg/kg. Fetal viability was reduced at 75 mg/kg in rats and at 50 mg/kg in rabbits. In rats, a significant increase in the incidence of malformations including cephalocele and stern-oschisis was observed in fetuses from the 75 mg/kg group. In addition, a developmental delay was indicated by reduction of fetal weight and by a significant increase in the occurrence of incomplete ossification of various skeletal structures. In the rabbit, fetal body weight was reduced at 50 mg/kg. Malformations observed at 50 mg/kg included gastroschisis, cephalocele, domed head, flexed paw, and skull and sternum anomalies. The lowest-observed-adverse-effect levels for maternal and developmental toxicity in the rat and rabbit were 75 and 50 mg/kg, respectively. The no-observed-adverse-effect level for maternal and developmental toxicity in the rat and rabbit was 10 mg/kg.


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