Abstract: | Ribavirin, a new synthetic antiviral agent, was studied for dominant lethal effects in male CD rats. The drug was administered intraperitoneally at doses of 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg/day for 5 days. Males were mated weekly with 8 consecutive batches of female rats. Marginal increase in early foetal death detected in Assessment Weeks 3 and 8 in females mated with the low-dose and high-dose males were not dose-related and were most probably chance events caused by the particularly low vehicle control frequencies for these 2 weeks. Also, the slightly reduced pregnancy proportion among females mated with the high-dose treated males was to a substantial extent the effect of a single male rate which failed to fertilize any females. Ribavirin was, therefore, regarded as being devoid of any mutagenic potential demonstrable by a rat dominant lethal assay. |