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Toxicologic Pathology
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Article

Thyroid Histopathology Assessments for the Amphibian Metamorphosis Assay to Detect Thyroid-active Substances

K. Christiana Grim*, Marilyn Wolfe, Thomas Braunbeck, Taisen Iguchi, Yasuhiko Ohta, Osamu Tooi, Les Touart, Douglas C. Wolf, and Joe Tietge

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: grim.christiana{at}epa.gov.


   Abstract

In support of an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Amphibian Metamorphosis Assay (AMA) Test Guideline for the detection of substances that interact with the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, a document was developed that provides a standardized approach for evaluating the histology/histopathology of thyroid glands in metamorphosing Xenopus laevis tadpoles. Here, a consolidated description of histology evaluation practices, core diagnostic criteria, and severity grading schemes for the AMA, and an atlas of the normal architecture of amphibian thyroid glands over the course of metamorphosis and the core diagnostic criteria with examples of severity grades is provided. Core diagnostic criteria include thyroid gland hypertrophy/atrophy, follicular cell hypertrophy, and follicular cell hyperplasia. The severity grading scheme is semiquantitative and employs a four-grade approach describing ranges of variation within assigned ordinal classes: not remarkable, mild, moderate, and severe. The purpose of this severity grading approach is to provide an efficient, semi-objective tool for comparing changes (compound-related effects) among animals, treatment groups, and studies. Proposed descriptions of lesions for scoring the four core criteria are also given.

First published on April 22, 2009, doi:10.1177/0192623309335063

Toxicologic Pathology 2009;37:415.

A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2009


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