Groups of 93 male and 93 female Sprague-Dawley rats were fed diets containing 1, 5, 25, and 250 ppm fenvalerate for up to 2 yr. The control group consisted of 183 males and 183 females. Approximately 10 treatment and 20 control rats/sex . group were killed at intervals of 3, 6, 12, and 18 mo. When body weights, food consumption, hematology, clinical chemistry and organ weights did not reveal a treatment effect, two additional groups of 50 males and 50 female rats were placed on 0 or 1000 ppm fenvalerate diets and maintained for 2 yr. Body weight was decreased and organ/body weight ratios were increased in brain, liver, spleen, kidneys (females), heart (females), and testes (males) in the 1000 ppm group. Mammary and pituitary tumors were commonly observed, along with a variety of other tumors occurring randomly among all control and treatment groups. No statistically significant differences in the number and type of neoplasms were observed except for mammary tumors in females in the main study. These effects were judged not to be toxicologically significant, since mammary tumor incidences did not exceed expected incidences in aged female Sprague-Dawley rats, time to tumor appearance was unchanged, and no shift in percent benign versus malignant tumors occurred. Sarcomas identified in the subcutis and dermis in 5/51 1000-ppm-treated males were also identified in 2% (1/50), 2% (2/102), and 0-6% of concurrent, original, and historical controls, respectively. Microscopic examination did not reveal any treatment-related lesions. The no-observable-effect level was determined to be 250 ppm.
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