Background Pathological Changes in Minipigs

Author:

Helke Kristi L.1,Nelson Keith N.2,Sargeant Aaron M.3,Jacob Binod3,McKeag Sean4,Haruna Julius5,Vemireddi Vimala6,Greeley Melanie7,Brocksmith Derek8,Navratil Nicole9,Stricker-Krongrad Alain8,Hollinger Charlotte2

Affiliation:

1. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

2. MPI Research, Mattawan, Michigan, USA

3. Charles River Laboratories, Spencerville, Ohio, USA

4. Covance Laboratories Limited, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, UK

5. CiToXLAB North America Inc., Laval, Quebec, Canada

6. Huntingdon Life Sciences, East Millstone, New Jersey, USA

7. WIL Research, Ashland, Ohio, USA

8. Sinclair Research Center and Sinclair Bio Resources, Auxvasse, Missouri, USA

9. Marshall BioResources, North Rose, New York, USA

Abstract

Swine, especially the miniature swine or minipigs, are increasingly being used in preclinical safety assessment of small molecules, biopharmaceutical agents, and medical devices as an alternate nonrodent species. Although swine have been used extensively in biomedical research, there is a paucity of information in the current literature detailing the incidence of background lesions and differences in incidence between commonly used breeds. This article is a collaborative effort between multiple organizations to define and document lesions found in the common breeds of minipigs used for toxicological risk assessment in North America (NA) and the European Union (EU). We retrospectively assessed 10 years of historical control data from several institutions located in NA and EU, covering the period of 2004–2015. Here we report the background lesions with consideration of breed and geographical location. To our knowledge, this is the first report documenting spontaneous background lesions in commonly used breeds of swine in both NA and EU. This report serves as a resource to pathologists and will aid in interpretation of findings and differentiation of background from test article–related changes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference26 articles.

1. Thymic Granulomatous Lesions in Pigs

2. Berggren K. F., Jensen M. M. (2008). The incidence of external and visceral congenital malformations in the Gottingen minipig. Accessed March 13, 2015. http://minipigs.dk/fileadmin/filer/Publications/Malformations_in_the_Goettingen_Minipig.pdf.

3. Restricted feeding may induce serous fat atrophy in male Göttingen minipigs

4. Immune Complex-associated Thrombocytopenic Purpura Syndrome in Sexually Mature Göttingen Minipigs

5. Best Practices Guideline: Toxicologic Histopathology

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