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Subchronic toxicology of tetrabromobisphenol A in rats

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Human & Experimental Toxicology

Published online on

Abstract

Tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA) is used to protect a wide range of electrical and electronic equipment, consumer electronics and office and communication equipment from catching fire. TBBPA reacts covalently with other monomers becoming an integral part of the cross-linked molecular structure. This study was conducted to evaluate the subchronic toxicity of TBBPA administered by gavage daily for 13 weeks at 0, 100, 300, and 1000 mg/kg/day in male and female CD® rats. A 6-week post-treatment control and 1000 mg/kg/day recovery groups were included. TBBPA exerted no marked effect on the rate of mortality, clinical signs, body or organ weights, feed consumption, histopathology, urinalysis, ophthalmology, and neurological outcomes in a functional observation battery, motor activity, serum thyroid stimulating hormone, serum triiodothyronine, or other serum chemistries. Although differences were observed for bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase, the observed alterations were within the normal range and thus were neither biologically or toxicologically meaningful. The single thyroid-related parameter affected by TBBPA was a reduction in serum thyroxine levels, but the decrease was not of sufficient magnitude to induce other more sensitive indicators of thyroid perturbation. The No Observed Adverse Effect Level was at least 1000 mg/kg/day, the highest dose tested. Based on an upper bound aggregate exposure for adults estimated by the European Union, the margin of exposure is approximately 5000, suggesting that, for the endpoints examined in this study, exposure to TBBPA presents a reasonable certainty of no harm.