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Influence of Study Design Variables on Clinical Pathology Data

Journal

TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 288-295

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0192623316677066

Keywords

blood sampling; clinical chemistry; fasting; hematology; housing; route of administration

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A number of factors related to study design have the potential to impact clinical pathology test results during the conduct of nonclinical safety studies. A thorough understanding of these factors is paramount in drawing accurate conclusions from clinical pathology data generated during such studies, particularly when attempting to make the distinction between test article and nontest article-related effects. Study design and conduct variables with potential to impact clinical pathology data discussed in this overview include those related to species and test system, animal age, animal care and husbandry practices, fasting, acclimatization periods, effects of transportation and stressors, route of administration, effects of in-life and surgical procedures, influence of study length, timing of blood collections, impact of vehicle/formulation composition, and some general concepts related to drug class. The material presented here is a summary based on information presented at the 35th Annual Symposium of the Society of Toxicologic Pathology (June 2016), during Symposium Session 2 titled Deciphering Sources of Variability in Clinical PathologyIt's Not Just about the Numbers.

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