The Spontaneous Incidence of Neurological Clinical Signs in Preclinical Species Using Cage-side Observations or High-definition Video Monitoring: A Retrospective Analysis

Author:

Orciani Chiara1,Ballesteros Cristina1,Troncy Eric2,Berthome Clemence3,Bujold Kim1,Bennamoune Nehla1,Sparapani Samantha1,Pugsley Michael K.4,Paquette Dominique2,Boulay Emmanuel12,Authier Simon12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Charles River, Laval, QC, Canada

2. GREPAQ, Faculté de Médecine Vétérinaire, Universite de Montreal, Saint Hyacinthe, QC, Canada

3. Centre Veterinaire DMV, QC, Canada

4. Cytokinetics, South San Francisco, CA, United States

Abstract

When conducting toxicology studies, the interpretation of drug-related neurological clinical signs such as convulsions, myoclonus/myoclonic jerks, tremors, ataxia, and salivation requires an understanding of the spontaneous incidence of those observations in commonly used laboratory animal species. The spontaneous incidence of central nervous system clinical signs in control animals from a single facility using cage-side observations or high definition video monitoring was retrospectively analyzed. Spontaneous convulsions were observed at low incidence in Beagle dogs and Sprague–Dawley rats but were not identified in cynomolgus monkeys and Göttingen minipigs. Spontaneous myoclonic jerks and muscle twitches were observed at low incidence in Beagle dogs, cynomolgus monkeys, and Sprague–Dawley rats but were not seen in Göttingen minipigs. Spontaneous ataxia/incoordination was identified in all species and generally with a higher incidence when using video monitoring. Salivation and tremors were the two most frequent spontaneous clinical signs and both were observed in all species. Data from the current study unveil potential limitations when using control data obtained from a single study for toxicology interpretation related to low incidence neurological clinical signs while providing historical control data from Beagle dogs, cynomolgus monkeys, Sprague–Dawley rats, and Göttingen minipigs.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Toxicology

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