European Food Safety Authority
EFSA publishes general guidance on 90-day feeding studies on whole food and
feed
7 December 2011
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has published its first
general guidance for carrying out 90-day feeding studies on whole food
and feed in rodents. It will support applicants in carrying out feeding
trials related to applications for novel foods and food and feed
derived from genetically modified organisms. The guidance, developed by
the EFSA's Scientific Committee, outlines a randomised block test
design to maximise the power of the experiment while avoiding
unnecessary use of test animals. With respect to animal welfare, the
guidance recommends housing rodents as pairs in order to reduce stress
in the animals.
90-day animal feeding studies are used to provide information for the
risk assessment of food and feed and/or of individual substances
contained therein. The objective of a 90-day feeding trial is to detect
any possible toxicological effects of the test diet compared to the
control diet. EFSA's guidance document - which complements the general
procedure set out in the OECD guideline for the testing of chemicals
- provides specific advice to applicants on how to design, conduct,
analyse, report and interpret 90-day oral toxicity studies carried out
in rodents with whole food or feed, such as for novel foods or food and
feed derived from genetically modified organisms. It also includes
directions for the preparation of appropriate test diets, statistical
analysis and for further harmonised reporting of the results.
Should 90-day feeding studies be carried out with whole food/feed, the
Scientific Committee recommends the use of a so-called randomised block
design. This design involves dividing the experiment into blocks
("mini-experiments") of two animals per cage, which are matched for age
and weight. Such a design takes into account animal welfare by
recommending, in accordance with EU legislation , that rodents should
be socially housed to avoid stress caused by solitary housing. It also
increases the power of the experiment by reducing possible sources of
variation between the tested animals which are unrelated to the
experiment itself (eg body weight of animals, location of the cages
etc.). The Scientific Committee recognises that other test designs may
be used for 90-day oral toxicity studies of whole food and feed in
rodents if warranted. Applicants should always investigate and
scientifically justify their testing strategy.
The guidance, prepared at the request of the European Commission, is
part of the Scientific Committee's ongoing efforts to contribute to the
advancement of risk assessment methodologies. It was subject to a
public consultation from 7 July to 15 September 2011. The views of
Member States, industry, non-governmental organisations and academia
received during the consultation were carefully considered by the
Scientific Committee in finalising the guidance.
* Guidance on conducting repeated-dose 90-day oral toxicity study in
rodents on whole food/feed
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Notes to editors:
Whole food or feed refers to a product to be consumed respectively by
humans or animals, which is composed of a multitude (up to thousands)
of individual substances. For example, whole foods from plant-based
products range from maize or potatoes to more refined products such as
fruit juices or flour. Individual ingredients used in the products are
outside of the scope of this guidance document.
The power of the experiment refers to the probability that a defined
pattern in data will be detected and that the extent of the pattern
will show a statistical significance.
EFSA's Scientific Committee supports the work of EFSA's Scientific
Panels on scientific matters of a horizontal nature and is responsible
for general co-ordination to ensure consistency in the scientific
opinions prepared by the Scientific Panels. The Scientific Committee
focuses on developing harmonised risk assessment methodologies in
fields where EU-wide approaches are not already defined.
For media enquiries please contact:
EFSA Media Relations Office
Tel. +39 0521 036 149
E-mail:
Press@efsa.europa.eu ---
OECD Guideline for the Testing of Chemicals - Repeated Dose 90-day
Oral Toxicity Study in Rodents (OECD TG 408)
EU Directive 2010/63 on the protection of animals used for
scientific purposes