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EC number: 215-239-8 | CAS number: 1314-62-1
- Life Cycle description
- Uses advised against
- Endpoint summary
- Appearance / physical state / colour
- Melting point / freezing point
- Boiling point
- Density
- Particle size distribution (Granulometry)
- Vapour pressure
- Partition coefficient
- Water solubility
- Solubility in organic solvents / fat solubility
- Surface tension
- Flash point
- Auto flammability
- Flammability
- Explosiveness
- Oxidising properties
- Oxidation reduction potential
- Stability in organic solvents and identity of relevant degradation products
- Storage stability and reactivity towards container material
- Stability: thermal, sunlight, metals
- pH
- Dissociation constant
- Viscosity
- Additional physico-chemical information
- Additional physico-chemical properties of nanomaterials
- Nanomaterial agglomeration / aggregation
- Nanomaterial crystalline phase
- Nanomaterial crystallite and grain size
- Nanomaterial aspect ratio / shape
- Nanomaterial specific surface area
- Nanomaterial Zeta potential
- Nanomaterial surface chemistry
- Nanomaterial dustiness
- Nanomaterial porosity
- Nanomaterial pour density
- Nanomaterial photocatalytic activity
- Nanomaterial radical formation potential
- Nanomaterial catalytic activity
- Endpoint summary
- Stability
- Biodegradation
- Bioaccumulation
- Transport and distribution
- Environmental data
- Additional information on environmental fate and behaviour
- Ecotoxicological Summary
- Aquatic toxicity
- Endpoint summary
- Short-term toxicity to fish
- Long-term toxicity to fish
- Short-term toxicity to aquatic invertebrates
- Long-term toxicity to aquatic invertebrates
- Toxicity to aquatic algae and cyanobacteria
- Toxicity to aquatic plants other than algae
- Toxicity to microorganisms
- Endocrine disrupter testing in aquatic vertebrates – in vivo
- Toxicity to other aquatic organisms
- Sediment toxicity
- Terrestrial toxicity
- Biological effects monitoring
- Biotransformation and kinetics
- Additional ecotoxological information
- Toxicological Summary
- Toxicokinetics, metabolism and distribution
- Acute Toxicity
- Irritation / corrosion
- Sensitisation
- Repeated dose toxicity
- Genetic toxicity
- Carcinogenicity
- Toxicity to reproduction
- Specific investigations
- Exposure related observations in humans
- Toxic effects on livestock and pets
- Additional toxicological data
Endpoint summary
Administrative data
Description of key information
A comprehensive literature search was recently conducted for the vanadium category substances, to source relevant information for the hazard and risk assessment. For the group of the soluble vanadium substances, a limited number of studies is available and the different experimental approaches lead to a variety of endpoints measured.
Of the limited effects noted following oral exposure with soluble vanadium substances, it appears most likely that effects on haematological parameters are the most consistently reported among a number of investigators (Mountain et al 1953, Zaporowska et al. 1993, Scibior et al 2006, Scibior, 2005, NTP, 2002). Altogether, haematological effects have been found with a variety of different vanadium compounds including sodium metavanadate, vanadium pentoxide, and ammonium metavanadate supporting the use of this endpoint for risk assessment purposes.
Information on repeated dose toxicity following inhalation exposure to divanadium pentaoxide is available in a NTP study (k_NTP 2002) with exposure of male and female rats and mice to V2O5 over 16-days, 3-months and 2-years. Pulmonary reactivity to divanadium pentaoxide was also investigated following subchronic inhalation exposure in a non-human primate animal model.
Divanadium pentaoxide is classified as Specific target organ toxicity — repeated exposure 1 according to commission Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008.
Key value for chemical safety assessment
Repeated dose toxicity: via oral route - systemic effects
Link to relevant study records
- Endpoint:
- chronic toxicity: oral
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- weight of evidence
- Study period:
- no data
- Reliability:
- 2 (reliable with restrictions)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- comparable to guideline study with acceptable restrictions
- Remarks:
- Well documented study. However, the following deficiencies were noted: test substance insufficiently described, low group sizes (n=8), missing parameters in clinical biochemistry and haematology, FOB was not conducted, only one sex was used, individual body weight data, ophthalmological examination missing, thyroid hormones were not determined, applied doses were not analytically verified, some organ weights were missing and not the complete table of organs were histopathologically examined. Historical control data were not provided and most of the data were presented as graphical overview, thus no raw/individual data were provided. The dose setting was changed during the study.
- Qualifier:
- no guideline followed
- Principles of method if other than guideline:
- This short description is restricted to non-diabetic rats. Investigations on the diabetic rats are not considered here. Four groups of non-diabetic male rats received different concentrations of VOSO4 in drinking water for 52 weeks. The low dose group received 500 mg/L for 52 weeks. The mid dose group received 500 mg/L for 1 week and then 750 mg/L for 51 weeks. The high dose group received 500 and 750 mg/L for 1 week each and then 1250 mg/L for further 50 weeks. Subgroups of 3 animals from each of the four groups were followed for further 16 weeks after cessation of VOSO4 treatment. Various parameters were examined and determined.
- GLP compliance:
- not specified
- Limit test:
- no
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Wistar
- Sex:
- male
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS
- Source: Charles River, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Weight at study initiation: 270-320 g
- Diet (ad libitum): standard laboratory food (Purina rat chow)
- Water: ad libitum: vanadyl sulphate hydrate mixed with tap water
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
- Photoperiod (hrs dark / hrs light): 12/12 - Route of administration:
- oral: drinking water
- Vehicle:
- water
- Details on oral exposure:
- PREPARATION OF DOSING SOLUTIONS:
- Vanadyl sulphate hydrate (Fischer Scientific Co., Lair lawn, NJ, USA) was mixed with drinking water.
- Solutions were prepared on alternative days. - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- not specified
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- no data
- Duration of treatment / exposure:
- 52 weeks
- Frequency of treatment:
- continuously (ad libitum in drinking water)
- Dose / conc.:
- 500 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- for 52 weeks (low dose group); nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 500 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- 500 mg/L for 1 week (mid dose group); nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 750 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- for 51 weeks (mid dose group); nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 500 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- for 1 week (high dose group); nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 750 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- for 1 week (high dose group); nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 1 250 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- for 50 weeks (high dose group); nominal in water
- No. of animals per sex per dose:
- 8 male rats per group
- Control animals:
- yes
- Details on study design:
- - Rationale for animal assignment: random
- Positive control:
- no data
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- CAGE SIDE OBSERVATIONS: Yes
- Time schedule: animals were examined closely for possible occurrance of diarrhoea, cataract formation or deterioration of their general condition.
DETAILED CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS: No data
BODY WEIGHT: Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: every 3-5 weeks; every 2-3 weeks during post-exposure observation period.
FOOD CONSUMPTION: Yes
- Food consumption for each animal determined and mean daily diet consumption calculated as g food/kg body weight/day: measured every 3-5 weeks; every 2-3 weeks during post-exposure observation period.
FOOD EFFICIENCY: No data
WATER CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if drinking water study): Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: regularly, every 3-5 weeks; every 2-3 weeks during post-exposure observation period
OPHTHALMOSCOPIC EXAMINATION: No
HAEMATOLOGY: Yes
- Time schedule for collection of blood: hematocrit, after 3, 6, 9 and 12 months of treatment as well as 3 months after withdrawal. Other paramenters after 52 weeks of exposure and 3 months of withdrawal.
- How many animals: each rat (haematocrit index).
- Parameters checked: hematocrit index of peripheral blood, haemoglobin, erythrocyte count, leukocyte count and composition, platelet count and reticulocyte percentage.
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY: Yes,
- Time schedule for collection of blood: every 3 months during treatment and 16 weeks after vanadyl withdrawal.
- Animals fasted: for 5 hr
- Parameters checked: aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and urea (for liver and kidney function).
- In addition, determination of non-fasting blood glucose (weekly in the first 4 weeks and then once upon every 2-4 weeks), fasting plasma glucose and insulin, plasma trigycerides and cholesterol throughout the exposure time (every 3 months).
URINALYSIS: No
NEUROBEHAVIOURAL EXAMINATION: No
IMMUNOLOGY: Not specified
OTHER:
- Determination of systolic blood pressure, pulse rate after 3, 6, 9 and 12 months of treatment as well as 3 months after withdrawal using tail-cuff method.
- Vanadium levels were determined in the 5-hr fasting plasma samples obtained at the end of the 52 wk-treatment and at weeks 6 and 12 after vanadyl withdrawal.
- V levels were determined in plasma, bone and some of the inner organs after 1 year exposure and after 16 weeks of vanadyl withdrawal - Sacrifice and pathology:
- After treatment for 52 weeks most of the rats were terminated for morphological studies with an overdose of halothane followed by decaptation. 8 rats from the exposed groups and 3 rats from the control group were kept and observed for a further period of 16 weeks (without exposure).
GROSS PATHOLOGY: Yes,
- Brain, thymus, lung, heart, liver, spleen, pancreas, adrenal gland, kidney and testis were weighed.
HISTOPATHOLOGY: Yes,
- Brain, thymus, lung, heart, liver, spleen, pancreas, adrenal gland, kidney and testis were examined. - Other examinations:
- no
- Statistics:
- All results were expressed as mean and standard error of the mean. The data were analyzed using repeated measure or one-way ANOVA, as appropriate, followed by the Newman-Keul’s test, if required. The values of haematological indices of the same rats before and after the withdrawal of vanadyl sulphate were compared using an unpaired Student’s t-test. The level of significance was set at P<0.05. The data from the morphological studies are presented as incidence (%) of the specific morphological abnormalities in each organ and were analyzed with the Chi-Square test. The data of plasma levels of AST; ALT and urea, of organ weight/body weight ratio, and of plasma and tissue concentrations of vanadium are shown as mean and standard error of the mean, and were analyzed with two-way or one-way analysis of variance, as appropriate, followed by the Newman-Keul’s test, if required.
- Clinical signs:
- not specified
- Mortality:
- mortality observed, non-treatment-related
- Description (incidence):
- - one animal died in the high dose group for unknown reasons after 18 weeks of treatment.
- Body weight and weight changes:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- - Body weight gain was slightly reduced in the low and mid dose groups indicated by an increasing number of deviations from control values from week 13 onwards reaching occasionally statistical significance.
- Body weight gain was markedly and statistically significantly, at most time points, reduced in the high dose group after week 4.
For details on body weight, please refer to the field "attached background material". - Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- no effects observed
- Food efficiency:
- not specified
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- no effects observed
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not specified
- Haematological findings:
- no effects observed
- Clinical biochemistry findings:
- no effects observed
- Urinalysis findings:
- not specified
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not specified
- Immunological findings:
- not specified
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- no effects observed
- Gross pathological findings:
- no effects observed
- Neuropathological findings:
- no effects observed
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- no effects observed
- Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- not specified
- Other effects:
- not specified
- Details on results:
- Only data on non-diabetic rats are considered. According to the authors, apart from the body weight changes, intakes of VOSO4 and plasma V concentrations, there were no significant differences in all other parameters among the V treatment groups. Therefore, the pooled results of the 3 treatment groups were used.
FOOD CONSUMPTION
- Food intake was not changed by V exposure compared to the controls.
WATER CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if drinking water study)
- Water intake was not changed by V exposure compared to the controls.
- Average intakes of VOSO4 were reported to be 34, 54 and 90 mg/kg bw/day (corresponding to 0.16, 0.25 and 0.41 mmol/kg/day).
HAEMATOLOGY
- Haematocrit did not show any differences between treatment and control groups.
- No differences between treatment and control groups were observed with respect to the haematological indices.
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
- Apart from transient fluctuations, data on clinical chemistry were not changed by the treatment.
ORGAN WEIGHTS
- Relative organ weights of brain, thymus, lung, heart, liver, spleen, pancreas, kidney, adrenal, testis did not differ from controls.
GROSS PATHOLOGY
- Gross pathology did not reveal marked differences between treated animals and their controls.
HISTOPATHOLOGY: NON-NEOPLASTIC
- Histopathology did not reveal marked differences between treated animals and their controls.
- Due to the small differences compared to controls, it is difficult to assess whether inflammatory focal cell infiltration of pancreas, interstitual cell hyperplasia in the testis and Leydig cell tumours seen in the groups after 1 year of treatment (1 or 2 animals each) as well as after cessation (1 animal each) was treatment-related. In contrast to the authors’ opinion, no clear recovery of liver and kidney lesions was observed after 16 weeks of cessation.
OTHER FINDINGS
- Systolic blood pressure, and pulse rate did not show any differences between treatment and control groups.
- At the end of the treatment period, plasma samples contained 0.18, 0.31 and 0.46 µg V/ml.
- At weeks 6 and 13 following withdrawal of V, no detectable amounts of V were found.
- Non-fasting blood glucose and fasting plasma glucose were not influenced by VOSO4 treatment, but fasting plasma insulin was reduced compared to the controls.
- VOSO4 treatment had no effect on triglycerides and cholesterol compared to the controls.
- A dose-related increase of V concentrations in various tissues was observed with a ranking bone>kidney testis>liver>plasma>pancreas>brain. After 16 weeks of cessation, small concentrations of V could be detected only in brain and kidney indicating some affinity of V to thes tissues but not in plasma and in the other organs investigated. - Dose descriptor:
- NOAEL
- Effect level:
- 750 mg/L drinking water
- Based on:
- test mat.
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- body weight and weight gain
- Remarks on result:
- other: 54±4.1 mg/kg bw/day (based on fluid intake)
- Dose descriptor:
- NOAEL
- Effect level:
- 16.9 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- body weight and weight gain
- Remarks on result:
- other: based on fluid intake
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
- Conclusions:
- Four groups of non-diabetic male rats received different concentrations of vanadyl sulfate (VOSO4) in drinking water for 52 weeks. The low dose group received 500 mg VOSO4/L in water for 52 weeks. The mid dose group received 500 mg/L for 1 week followed by 750 mg VOSO4/L in water for 51 weeks. The high dose group received 500 and 750 mg/L for 1 week each followed by 1250 mg VOSO4/L in water for further 50 weeks. Three recovery animals of each group were followed for further 16 weeks after cessation of VOSO4 treatment.
Treatment of male rats with different dose levels of vanadyl sulfate in drinking water corresponding to 34, 54 and 90 mg/kg bw/day over 52 weeks did not indicate severe signs of systemic toxicity under the conditions of this study. Body weights were dose-dependently reduced in treatment groups compared to controls, occasionally reaching statistical significance in the low and mid dose groups and at most time points in the high dose group. At study termination (week 52) significant difference in body weight (>10%) compared to control animals was observed in high dose animals only. Body weights of low and mid dose animals were lower (<10%) but not significantly different and thus considered not biologically relevant.
Based on significant and biologically relevant effects on body weight in high dose animals, the mid dose level of 54 mg/kg bw/day represents a NOAEL. - Endpoint:
- sub-chronic toxicity: oral
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- weight of evidence
- Study period:
- no data
- Reliability:
- 3 (not reliable)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- significant methodological deficiencies
- Remarks:
- Well document study, however, beside general toxicity, the investigations were restricted to liver and renal function parameters and histopathology. The following deficiencies were noted: test item insufficiently described, no analytical verification of applied doses, only males were used, haematology missing, clinical biochemistry parameter missing, missing organ weights, several organs were not histopathologically examined, details on gross pathology not given, ophthalmological examination not performed, FOB not conducted, thyroid hormones not determined, historical control data missing and individual/raw data not provided, details on histopathological findings were not provided.
- Qualifier:
- no guideline followed
- Principles of method if other than guideline:
- Sodium metavanadate was given to groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats at concentrations of 0, 5, 10 and 50 ppm for three months. Liver and renal function parameters were determined in blood at the end of exposure period and organ weights were taken (liver, kidneys, heart, spleen, lung). Heart, liver, lungs, kidneys, spleen, stomach, small and large intestine were histopathologically examined in three rats of each group.
- GLP compliance:
- not specified
- Limit test:
- no
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Sprague-Dawley
- Sex:
- male
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS (40 males)
- Source: Biocentre (Barcelona, Spain)
- Weight at study initiation: about 91.6 +/- 10.8 g at the start of exposure
- Housing: all animals were placed in individual metabolism cages
- Diet: ad libitum (perfectly balanced Panlab diet, Barcelona, Spain), neglible vanadium concentration
- Water: ad libitum - Route of administration:
- oral: drinking water
- Vehicle:
- water
- Details on oral exposure:
- PREPARATION OF DOSING SOLUTIONS:
- Solutions of sodium metavandate and water were prepared without heating at pH 7.4 and stored at 21-24 °C - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- not specified
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- no data
- Duration of treatment / exposure:
- 3 months
- Frequency of treatment:
- continuous (in drinking water)
- Dose / conc.:
- 5 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 10 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal in water
- Dose / conc.:
- 50 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal in water
- No. of animals per sex per dose:
- 10 males per group
- Control animals:
- yes, concurrent vehicle
- Details on study design:
- no data
- Positive control:
- no data
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- CAGE SIDE OBSERVATIONS: Yes
- Time schedule: no data
DETAILED CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS: No data
BODY WEIGHT: Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: weekly
FOOD CONSUMPTION: Yes
- Food consumption for each animal determined and mean daily diet consumption calculated as g food/kg body weight/day: Yes, measured daily
FOOD EFFICIENCY: Yes
- Body weight gain in kg/food consumption in kg per unit time X 100 calculated as time-weighted averages from the consumption and body weight gain data: protein efficiency coefficient was calculated weekly
WATER CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if drinking water study): Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: daily
OPHTHALMOSCOPIC EXAMINATION: No data
HAEMATOLOGY: No data
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY: Yes,
- Time schedule for collection of blood: at the end of exposure
- How many animals: 5 animals per group
- Parameters checked: serum analyses was carried out (GOT, GPT, total protein, bilirubin, urea, uric acid,creatine, glucose and cholesterol)
URINALYSIS: Yes
- Metabolism cages used for collection of urine: Yes
- Parameters checked: volume excreted
NEUROBEHAVIOURAL EXAMINATION: No data
IMMUNOLOGY: Not specified
OTHER
- Vanadium concentration in liver, kidneys, spleen, heart and lungs were determined - Sacrifice and pathology:
- All animals not used for clinical chemistry were killed at the end of exposure.
GROSS PATHOLOGY: Yes
- Necropsy was performed on all animals after exsanguination.
- Organ weights of liver, kidneys, heart, spleen and lungs were determined.
HISTOPATHOLOGY: Yes:
- Histological examination of heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, spleen, stomach and small and large intestine in three rats of each group. - Other examinations:
- no
- Statistics:
- The significance of differences between control and treated groups was calculated by the Student's test. A difference is considered to be significant when p<0.05.
- Clinical signs:
- no effects observed
- Mortality:
- no mortality observed
- Body weight and weight changes:
- no effects observed
- Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- no effects observed
- Food efficiency:
- no effects observed
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- no effects observed
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not specified
- Haematological findings:
- not specified
- Clinical biochemistry findings:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- - The amount of total protein was significantly increased in the highest dose group.
- The plasma concentrations of urea and uric acid were increased in the highest exposure group. - Urinalysis findings:
- no effects observed
- Description (incidence and severity):
- on volume of urine
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not specified
- Immunological findings:
- not specified
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- no effects observed
- Gross pathological findings:
- not specified
- Neuropathological findings:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- - Histopathological investigation showed mild, though dose-dependent, lesions in kidneys, lungs and spleen in all dosage groups.
- The changes were more evident in the highest dose group (no further details presented).
- Hyperthrophy and hyperplasia were observed in the white pulp of spleen.
- Corticomedullar micro haemorrhagic foci were seen in kidneys.
- Mononuclear cell infiltration, mostly perivascular, were found in lungs. - Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- not specified
- Other effects:
- not specified
- Details on results:
- CLINICAL SIGNS AND MORTALITY
- Appearance, behaviour and mortality of the treated rats of all groups were not affected.
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN
- Growth of the treated rats of all groups was not affected.
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if feeding study)
- Food consumption of the treated rats of all groups was not affected.
WATER CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if drinking water study)
- Water consumption of the treated rats of all groups was not affected.
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
- Enzyme activities (GOT, GPT) and the amounts of bilirubin in the plasma did not indicate effects on the liver function.
- Glucose and cholesterol showed no changes.
URINALYSIS
- No effects on volume of urine.
ORGAN WEIGHTS
- No dose-dependent differences between treated animals and controls.
OTHER FINDINGS
- Vanadium accumulation was first observed at the dose of 10 ppm in the kidneys and spleen and increased dose-dependently.
- At the highest dose, enrichment of V was also observed in liver, heart and lungs compared to the lower doses and the controls. - Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 1.51 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- test mat.
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- histopathology: non-neoplastic
- Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 0.62 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- histopathology: non-neoplastic
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
- Conclusions:
- Sodium metavanadate in drinking water was given to four groups, each consisting of 10 male Sprague-Dawley rats, at concentrations of 0, 5, 10 and 50 ppm. Liver and renal function parameters were determined in blood at the end of exposure period and organ weights were taken (liver, kidneys, heart, spleen, lung). Heart, liver, lungs, kidneys, spleen, stomach, small and large intestine were histopathologically examined in three rats of each group.
Oral administration of NaVO3 via drinking water to groups of male rats over 3 months at concentrations of 0, 5, 10 and 50 ppm caused mild, dose-dependent lesions in kidneys, lungs and spleen with the highest incidence in the 50 ppm group, and increased plasma concentrations of protein, urea and uric acid in the high dose group. Thus, the highest dose level (7.57 mg/kg bw/d NaVO3) represents a clear LOAEL, and the mid dose level (1.51 mg/kg bw/d NaVO3) represents a NOAEL. - Endpoint:
- sub-chronic toxicity: oral
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- weight of evidence
- Reliability:
- 3 (not reliable)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- significant methodological deficiencies
- Remarks:
- The following deficiencies were noted: test substance insufficiently described, number of animals per group too low for appropriate statistical analysis, only male rats were used, individual body weight data not given, clinical signs were not recorded, complete haematology missing for 100 and 150 ppm group, haematology not performed for remaining groups, clinical biochemistry not conducted, organ weights, necropsy and histopathology not performed/recorded, FOB not performed, thyroid hormones not determined, ophthalmological examination not performed, historical control data not provided, the applied doses were changed during the study.
- Qualifier:
- no guideline followed
- Principles of method if other than guideline:
- Measurement of the cystine content of the hair of rats fed diets containing vanadium pentoxide was undertaken to determine if there were changes in cystine content indicative of abnormal metabolism.
Rats were given diets supplemented with vanadium at both high and low levels. In a separate experiment, methionine was also included in the diet of vanadium fed rats to determine whether this sulfur amino acid would counteract the effects of vanadium. - GLP compliance:
- not specified
- Limit test:
- no
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Wistar
- Sex:
- male
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS
- Weight at study initiation: 200 to 350 gm (Details for Low Level Vanadium exposure group)
- Diet: Purina Dog Chow Checkers, ground in a Wiley Mill. - Route of administration:
- oral: feed
- Vehicle:
- other: Purina Dog Chow Checkers
- Details on oral exposure:
- Low Level Vanadium exposure:
- One group received a stock diet of Purina Dog Chow Checkers.
- A second group received the stock diet, with 25 ppm of vanadium incorporated in the form of vanadium pentoxide.
- 50 ppm of vanadium was similarly included in the diet of a third group.
- After 35 days, the levels of dietary vanadium were raised to 100 and 150 ppm, respectively, in order to elicit more pronounced differences.
High Level Vanadium exposure:
- A similar study was performed on rats fed the vanadium pentoxide at levels of 500 and 1,000 ppm of vanadium.
- A fourth group of five rats which served as group-paired fed control for those receiving 500 ppm was added.
High Level Vanadium with added methionine:
- dl-methionine in amounts of 1.6 % was added to the diet of one group of rats whose diet further contained 500 ppm V as the pentoxide.
- Another similar group was fed a diet containing 500 ppm V only
- A third similar group served as group-paired fed controls for the latter. - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- yes
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- - The metallic composition of the stock and the vanadium-supplemented diets were determined by spectrographic analysis.
- Stock diet of the rats contained an average of 0.7 γ of vanadium per gram. - Duration of treatment / exposure:
- - Low Level Vanadium exposure: 103 days
- High Level Vanadium exposure: 75 days
- High Level Vanadium with added methionine exposure: 63 days - Frequency of treatment:
- Daily
- Dose / conc.:
- 25 ppm
- Remarks:
- (nominal vanadium content in diet; first 35 days; low level vanadium exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 100 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal vanadium content in diet (36 -103 days; low level vanadium exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 50 ppm
- Remarks:
- (nominal vanadium content in diet; first 35 days; low level vanadium exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 150 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal vanadium content in diet (36 -103 days; low level vanadium exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 500 ppm
- Remarks:
- vanadium with or without methionine; nominal in diet (High Level Vanadium with added methionine exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 500 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal vanadium content in diet (High Level Vanadium exposure group)
- Dose / conc.:
- 1 000 ppm
- Remarks:
- nominal vanadium content in diet (High Level Vanadium exposure group)
- No. of animals per sex per dose:
- - Low Level Vanadium exposure: 5 male rats per dose plus one control group of 5 rats
- High Level Vanadium exposure: 5 male rats per dose plus one control group of 5 rats and one group of 5 rats as group-paired fed control for those receiving 500 ppm.
- High Level Vanadium with added methionine: 6 rats in the 500 ppm group, 6 rats in the control-fed group, and 7 rats at 500 ppm + 1.6% dl-methionine. - Control animals:
- yes, concurrent vehicle
- Details on study design:
- No data
- Positive control:
- No data
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- LOW LEVEL VANADIUM EXPOSURE:
CAGE SIDE OBSERVATIONS: No data
DETAILED CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS: No data
BODY WEIGHT GAIN: Yes
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if feeding study):
- Food consumption for each animal determined and mean daily diet consumption calculated as g food/kg body weight/day: Yes
- Daily records of food consumption were kept throughout the duration of the experiment.
FOOD EFFICIENCY: No data
WATER CONSUMPTION: No data
OPHTHALMOSCOPIC EXAMINATION: No
HAEMATOLOGY:
- Red blood cell count and hemoglobin level were determined.
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY: No
URINALYSIS: No
NEUROBEHAVIOURAL EXAMINATION: No
IMMUNOLOGY: Not specified
OTHER:
- Just prior to the introduction of vanadium into the experimental diets, samples of hair were clipped from all the animals.
- Other hair samples were taken at 60 and 103 days (Low Level Vanadium) or 36 and 75 days (High Level Vanadium).
- The hair samples were obtained by first skirting off and discarding about 1 to 1.5 cm of the hair back from the tips. An electric clipper was then used to cut of the hair close to the skin over an area from the shoulder to the base of the tail on the back of the animal. Samples were defatted by placing in evaporating dishes containing benzene for 30 minutes, rinsing with fresh benzene, draining, and air drying (Sullivan, M.X.; Hess, W.C., and Howe, P. E.: A Comparison of the Wool and Skins of Full-Fed and Maintenance-Fed Lambs, J. Agric. Res. 61: 877, 1940).
- Hair samples were stored in a vacuum desiccator over Drierite for 24 hours or until analyzed.
- Samples were analyzed for cystine content. - Sacrifice and pathology:
- GROSS PATHOLOGY: No data
ORGAN WEIGHT: liver-weight to body weight ratio (HIGH LEVEL VANADIUM WITH ADDED METHIONINE EXPOSURE)
HISTOPATHOLOGY: No data - Other examinations:
- No data
- Statistics:
- Analysis of variance was used.
- Clinical signs:
- not specified
- Mortality:
- not specified
- Body weight and weight changes:
- no effects observed
- Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- no effects observed
- Food efficiency:
- not specified
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- not specified
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not specified
- Haematological findings:
- no effects observed
- Clinical biochemistry findings:
- not specified
- Urinalysis findings:
- not specified
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not specified
- Immunological findings:
- not specified
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- no effects observed
- Gross pathological findings:
- not specified
- Neuropathological findings:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- not specified
- Other effects:
- not specified
- Details on results:
- LOW LEVEL VANADIUM EXPOSURE:
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN/FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if feeding study)
- Food intake of all groups (total food intake: control: 1,996 gm/rat; 100 ppm group: 2,130 gm/rat; 150 ppm group: 2,019 gm/rat) was nearly the same.
- The vanadium test groups gained more weight than did the controls (average body weight gain: control: 101 gm/rat; 100 ppm group: 156 gm/rat; 150 ppm group: 146 gm/rat); this was not statistically significant.
HAEMATOLOGY
- At 100 and 150 ppm, lower erythrocyte counts were obtained (at study termination: control: 7.7; 100 ppm group: 6.8; 150 ppm group: 6.3)
- Hemoglobin level were decreased (at study termination: control: 15.0; 100 ppm group: 14.5; 150 ppm group: 13.7); this was not statistically significant.
OTHER FINDINGS:
- The cystine content of the hair of the control group increased with time, whereas that of the rats fed the 100 ppm vanadium diet remained nearly constant
- At the 150 ppm level, a decrease in the average hair cystine values occurred.
- The hair cystine of all the individual rats in the control group increased, the smallest increase amounting to 1.15 %.
- Of three rats in the vanadium groups which showed higher hair cystine after, the greatest single increase (0.76%) occurred in those receiving the 100 ppm V.
- The decrease in cystine are considered significant on a relative basis, i.e., comparing the vanadium-fed groups with their corresponding controls.
- The average change in cysteine was statistically significant different from the 100 ppm group and the 150 ppm group (at the 0.5% level).
HIGH LEVEL VANADIUM EXPOSURE:
CLINICAL SIGNS AND MORTALITY
- One rat died in the third week.
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN
- A decreased rate of body-weight gain occurred in both high level vanadium treated groups, compared with that of controls
- The decreased weight gain was greater in both vanadium groups than in the group-paired fed controls, indicating that food restriction was not the sole factor of growth impairment
- Average body weight gains: control: 125 gm/rat; 500 ppm group: 42 gm/rat; food control group: 90 gm/rat; 1000 ppm group: - 2 gm /rat; this was not statistically significant.
OTHER FINDINGS
- The cystine content of hair of rats fed the higher levels of vanadium, 500 and 1,000 ppm, was depressed in comparison with that of the controls
- Average change in cystine: control: 0.44 +/- 0.20 %, 500 ppm group: -0.19 +/- 0.48%; food control group: -0.26 +/- 0.25%; 1000 ppm group: -0.76 +/- 0.13%; statistically significant at the 5% level).
- This finding corresponded to that at the lower levels, with the difference that the percentage decrease in cystine at the 1,000 ppm level was greater (0.76%) and occurred sooner (75 days) than at the 150 ppm level which required 103 days to produce a 0.41 % average decrease in cystine content.
- The 0.76 % decrease in hair cystine content at the 1,000 ppm level of vanadium feeding is highly significant on an absolute basis, i.e., comparing final and original cystine percentages within the same group.
HIGH LEVEL VANADIUM WITH ADDED METHIONINE EXPOSURE:
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN
- The weight gain per 100 gm of food consumed by the rats on the methionine-vanadium diets somewhat improved, as compared with those on vanadium diets (5.66 gm. vs. 6.62 gm, not statistically significant).
ORGAN WEIGHTS
- Methionine did not significantly affect either the growth or the relative liver weight in vanadium-fed animals.
- The average values for these suggest a definite tendency toward improvement as a result of the administration of methionine.
- The methionine supplement, however, did not significantly change the liver-weight to body weight rations.
OTHER FINDINGS
- The methionine supplement, however, did not significantly improve the growth of the hair.
- It was noted that the hair growth of the methionine-fed animals was markedly inhibited (10 -90 %).
COMBINED FINDINGS:
- Substantiating evidence for chemical changes found in the hair of vanadium-treated animals were structural changes, both gross and microscopic.
- The regrowth of hair was sparser, coarser, and stiffer compared with the more fleece-like hair of the controls. - Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 4.58 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- body weight and weight gain
- Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 150 ppm
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- body weight and weight gain
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
- Conclusions:
- Male rats were treated with vanadium pentoxide for up to 103 days. The experimental setup was split into three phases: 1. animals were exposed to 0, 100 and 150 ppm V for 103 days; 2. animals were exposed to 0, 500 and 1000 ppm V and one group-paired fed control for the 500 ppm group for 75 days; 3. animals were exposed to 0 and 500 ppm V and an additional group was fed with a diet containing 500 ppm V and 1.6% methionine for 63 days.
In all three setups body weight gain and food intake as well as amount of ingested vanadium were recorded. In the first two setups of the study the cysteine content of hair was determined three times (1. setup: day 0, 60 and 103; 2. setup: day 0, 36 and 75). Additionally, in the first setup, red cell count and haemoglobin was determined before study initiation and at study termination. In the third setup liver to body weight ratio was recorded.
According to the author, hair cysteine content decreased dose-dependently in animals exposed to 100, 150, 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium. The food intake was not significantly affected in animals exposed to vanadium. However, animals exposed to 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium showed significantly decreased body weight gains after 75 days (500 and 1000 ppm V) and 63 days (500 ppm V). Animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm vanadium for 103 days showed slightly decreased red cell counts and haemoglobin levels. No effects on liver to body weight ratios were observed in animals exposed to 500 ppm vanadium for 63 days.
Since the effects on red cell count and haemoglobin in animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm for 103 days were mild and within historical control ranges of this rat strain and age, the effects were considered to be negligible. Further, cysteine content of rat hair was slightly reduced but the adversity of this effect remains questionable. Since body weight and food consumption in animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm V were normal and no further adverse effects were observed, mildly decreased values of cysteine in hair is considered not adverse. Consequently, 150 ppm V (equivalent to 4.58 mg V/kg bw/day) represents the NOEL of this study, based on the reduced body weight gain in animals exposed to 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium. - Endpoint:
- short-term repeated dose toxicity: oral
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- weight of evidence
- Reliability:
- 3 (not reliable)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- significant methodological deficiencies
- Remarks:
- Well reported study, however, the relevance of the study is limited because only selected parameters were investigated and animals were dosed for only 4 weeks. The test material was insufficiently described, complete haematology, clinical biochemistry, FOB, necropsy, ophthalmological examination, thyroid hormones, organ weights and histopathology were not conducted/evaluated, applied doses were not analytically analysed, historical control data were not provided and only two doses were applied.
- Qualifier:
- no guideline followed
- Principles of method if other than guideline:
- Male and female Wistar rats were orally exposed to ammonium metavanadate (0, 10 or 50 mg V/L ) in drinking water for 4 weeks. Body weight gain, food and fluid uptake as well as various haematological and biochemical parameters were determined.
- GLP compliance:
- not specified
- Limit test:
- no
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Wistar
- Sex:
- male/female
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS (46 males and 47 females)
- Age at study initiation: 2 months
- Housing: rats were housed singly in stainless steel cages in a vivarium
- Diet: standard granulated rodent laboratory chow (LSM; CLPP; Motycz, Lublin, Poland)
- Water (ad libitum): deionized water (for control animals)
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
- Temperature: 19 -20 °C
- Humidity: 60 +/- 10%;
- Photoperiod (hrs dark / hrs light): natural day-night light cycles - Route of administration:
- oral: drinking water
- Vehicle:
- water
- Remarks:
- sole drinking water
- Details on oral exposure:
- PREPARATION OF DOSING SOLUTIONS:
- Aqueous solutions of AMV at concentrations of 10 and 50 mg V/L were prepared - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- not specified
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- no data
- Duration of treatment / exposure:
- 4 weeks
- Frequency of treatment:
- continuously (in drinking water, ad libitum)
- Dose / conc.:
- 10 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- nominal in water
Vanadium intake: males. 1.18 ± 0.01 mg/kg bw/day; females: 1.50 ± 0.23 mg/kg bw/day (calculated based on ingested amount of AMV solution) - Dose / conc.:
- 50 mg/L drinking water
- Remarks:
- nominal in water
Vanadium intake: males. 4.93 ± 0.15 mg/kg bw/day; females: 6.65 ± 0.27 mg/kg bw/day (calculated based on ingested amount of AMV solution) - No. of animals per sex per dose:
- 15 -16 animals each
- Control animals:
- yes, concurrent vehicle
- Details on study design:
- Rationale for animal assignment: Animals of each sex were randomly divided into three groups.
- Positive control:
- no data
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- CAGE SIDE OBSERVATIONS: Yes
- Time schedule: no data
DETAILED CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS: No data
BODY WEIGHT: Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: weekly
FOOD CONSUMPTION: Yes
- Food consumption for each animal determined and mean daily diet consumption calculated as g food/kg body weight/day: the amount of food consumed was checked daily
FOOD EFFICIENCY: No data
WATER CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if drinking water study): Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: amounts of water and AMV solution consumed for the tested rats were checked daily
during of the experimental period.
- The vanadium intake was calculated on the basis of the amount of AMV solution consumed for rats.
OPHTHALMOSCOPIC EXAMINATION: No data
HAEMATOLOGY: Yes
- Parameters checked: number of erythrocytes and leukocytes, haemolobin level, haematocrit, percentage composition of leukocytes and polychromatophilic erythrocytes in the peripheral blood, percentage of reticulocytes
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY: No data
URINALYSIS: No data
NEUROBEHAVIOURAL EXAMINATION: No data
IMMUNOLOGY: Not specified
OTHER:
- Enzyme measurements were performed from freshly collected blood: erythrocytes enzyme activities: catalse, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase
- The level of lipid peroxides in erythrocytes was deteremined (expressed as malonyldialdehyde (MDA) equivalent)
- The L-ascorbic acid concentration in plasma and red blood cells was determined
- The reduced glutathione level (GSH) in blood was estimated - Sacrifice and pathology:
- no data
- Other examinations:
- no data
- Statistics:
- Student's t-test was used for statistical analysis. The value of P < 0.05 was assumed as the level of significance. All results are presented as mean values +/- SEM.
- Clinical signs:
- no effects observed
- Mortality:
- no mortality observed
- Body weight and weight changes:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- Body weight increases of the animals receiving aqueous AMV solutions were lower than those of controls.
Body weight gain in males: control: 74.77± 5.97 g; low dose: 63.83± 2.86 g; high dose: 67.85 ± 3.10 g
Body weight gain in females: control: 35.03± 2.61 g; low dose: 27.88± 2.80 g; high dose: 31.92± 2.22 g
Overall, body weight gain was slightly reduced in the treatment groups compared to the controls but not in a dose-related manner. - Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- no effects observed
- Food efficiency:
- not specified
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- Slightly but statistically significant reduced fluid intake in high dose males (control males: 25.65 ± 0.65 cm3/rat, high dose males: 22.04 ± 0.68 cm3/rat). No effects in females.
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not specified
- Haematological findings:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Description (incidence and severity):
- HAEMATOLOGY:
- Haematological examination demonstrated a significant decrease in the erythrocyte count in both treatment groups, whereas haemoglobin levels were significantly reduced only in the high dose group. Hematocrit was reduced in males and females of both treatment groups, but significantly reduced in males only.
- Decrease in the erythrocyte count was associated with a increase in the percentage of reticulocytes, statistically significant in high dose males and females, and a non-statistically significant but dose dependent increase in polychromatophilic erythrocyte percentage in peripheral blood.
- the leukocyte count, including neutrophils, eosinophils, monocytes and lymphocytes, was not changed compared to control animals. - Clinical biochemistry findings:
- not specified
- Urinalysis findings:
- not specified
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not specified
- Immunological findings:
- not specified
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- not specified
- Gross pathological findings:
- not specified
- Neuropathological findings:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- not specified
- Other effects:
- not specified
- Details on results:
- CLINICAL SIGNS AND MORTALITY
- Treated animals did not show any differences in their external appearance or locomotor behavior as compared with controls.
- No diarrhoe was observed in the treatment groups
FOOD CONSUMPTION AND COMPOUND INTAKE (if feeding study)
- Food uptake in the experimental groups was similar compared to the control group.
OTHER FINDINGS
- Biochemical analyses demonstrated a decrease of L-ascorbic acid levels in plasma and erythrocytes of males and females exposed to V. But the difference proved to be statistically significant for L-ascorbic acid in plasma of males only (control: 14.09±1.17 µg/cm3; low dose: 10.67±1.16 µg/cm3; high dose: 8.90±1.69 µg/cm3).
- A tendency for the malonyldialdehyde level to increase in the blood was also observed.
- The GSH level in blood was slightly depressed.
- Among the enzymes examined in the erythrocytes (catalase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase and delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase [ALA-D]) only the ALA-D activity was depressed, but not statistically significant. - Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 50 other: mg V/L
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male/female
- Basis for effect level:
- other: no adverse effects observed
- Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 4.93 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- male
- Basis for effect level:
- other: see remarks
- Dose descriptor:
- NOEL
- Effect level:
- 6.65 mg/kg bw/day (nominal)
- Based on:
- element
- Sex:
- female
- Basis for effect level:
- other: see remarks
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
- Conclusions:
- Male and female Wistar rats were orally exposed to ammonium metavanadate (0, 10 or 50 mg V/L ) in drinking water for 4 weeks. Body weight gain, food and fluid uptake as well as various haematological and biochemical parameters were determined.
Effects on palatability of vanadium containing fluids was observed at 50 mg V/L (significant in males but not in females). Mild and not dose-dependent effects were observed on body weight gain. Additionally, slight but significant effects on erythrocytes, reticulocytes and haemoglobin as well as L-ascorbic acid level in plasma and erythrocytes were observed in both dose groups. As no dose dependency was observed, mild effects on body weight gain were considered negligible. Significant effects on haematological parameters were considered to be mild and within historical control ranges of this rat strain and age (discussed below). Effects on L-ascorbic acid level in erythrocytes and plasma were also not considered relevant since the adversity of this effect is unclear (discussed below) and no further adverse effect was observed. Based on this, the NOEL of this study is considered to be 50 mg V/L drinking water, which is equivalent to 4.93 and 6.65 mg V/kg bw/day in males and females, respectively.
This study is well reported, however, no guideline was followed and only limited parameters were analysed. Erythrocytes and haemoglobin and reticulocytes were slightly but significantly changed in both dose groups and sexes. These changes were not considered to be adverse as they were minor compared to control and within historical control data of this rat strain and age (e.g. Kort, M. et al. (2020) and Giknis, M. & Clifford, C.B. (2008)).
Apart from the above-mentioned minor effects on some haematological parameters, the level of L-ascorbic acid was significantly decreased in plasma of low and high dose males but not in females. The same author reported one year later (please refer to Zaporowska 1994) that male and female rats exposed to doses of up to 0.30 mg V/ml showed clearly reduced L-ascorbic acid values in liver, kidney, adrenals and spleen. Thus, exposure to ammonium metavanadate seems to correlate with decreased L-ascorbic acid values in different tissues and body fluids. However, as no systemic toxicity or any other effect was observed, it remains unclear whether mild to moderate L-ascorbic acid depression is or results in any adverse effects. In a publication of Chan & Reade (1996) Wistar Shionogi rats, unable to synthesize L-ascorbic acid, were supplemented with different doses of L-ascorbic acid to determine the L-ascorbic acid requirements in Wistar rats. After 26 weeks, all animals survived and showed no clinical signs of scurvy. The average weekly body weight gain was normal. A severe L-ascorbic acid deficiency would include perinasal and peri-and intra-oral haemorrhage, joint or intramuscular haemorrhage, weakened or fractured hind limbs, delayed wound healing and a failure to thrive (Clemetson, 1989). As none of these clinical signs were observed in studies reported by Zaporowska (1993, 1994) or Chan & Reade (1996), it is assumed that this mild to moderate L-ascorbic acid depression observed in this study is not an adverse effect.
It has been demonstrated that the toxicity of vanadium increases with its valency. Thus, compounds containing pentavalent V, such as ammonium metavanadate, are most poisonous. It is known that pentavalent V enters cells through anion channels, i.e. phosphate or sulfate channels. In cells, pentavalent V is reduced to divalent VO by some reducing compounds such as L-ascorbic acid and thiol-containing cysteine. Thus, the reported reduction of L-ascorbic acid in plasma and erythrocytes and also in several tissues (Zaporowska, 1994) is most likely the result of an enhanced consumption/reduction activity of this compound. However, in contrast to humans, rodents are able to synthesize L-ascorbic acid. Thus, it can be assumed that this reduction of L-ascorbic acid will induce re-synthesis and reduction of L-ascorbic acid is an adaptive but not an adverse effect. Apart from that, it is also noteworthy that humans are not able to synthesize L-ascorbic acid. Based on this, it is assumed that the protective reduction of pentavalent V to divalent VO is performed by another reducing substance and thus, it remains questionable whether a reduction of L-ascorbic acid in rats is relevant for humans.
References:
Clemetson, I.B. et al. (1975): Synthesis and some major functions of vitamin C in aniamsl. Annals of New York Academy of Science 258, 24 -46
Kort, M. et al. (2020):
Historical control data for hematology parameters obtained from toxicity studies performed on different Wistar rat strains: Acceptable value ranges, definition of severity degrees, and vehicle effects. Toxicology Research and Application, Vol. 4:1 -32
Giknis, M. & Clifford, C.B. (2008):
Clinical Laboratory Parameters for Crl:WI (Han)- Historical control data of studies conducted at Charles River - Executive summary:
Two-months old male and female Wistar rats were dosed with 10 and 50 mg V/L drinking water for 4 weeks. Body weight gain, food and fluid uptake as well as various haematological and biochemical parameters were determined.
According to the author, food intake was not affected, however, fluid intake was statistically significant decreased in high dose males but not in females. Body weight gain showed a tendency to be decreased in low and high dose animals, but not dose dependently and not statistically significant. Erythrocytes were significantly decreased in both dose groups, but not dose dependently in males. Haemoglobin was significantly decreased in high dose males and females, whereas haematocrit was significantly decreased in low and high dose males only. Reticulocytes were significantly decreased in high dose males and females whereas leukocytes were not affected at all. Biochemical analyses demonstrated a decrease of L-ascorbic acid levels in plasma and erythrocytes of males and females exposed to V. But the difference proved to be statistically significant for L-ascorbic acid in plasma of males only. GSH level in blood was slightly depressed and among the enzymes examined in the erythrocytes only the ALA-D activity was depressed, but not statistically significant.
Referenceopen allclose all
After cessation of VOSO4 treatment, no differences between controls and V treatment groups were observed with regards to the biological parameters apart from slightly increasing body weight gain in the treatment groups adapting to normal values of the control group.
Conversion from ppm (mg/L) to mg/kg bw /d based on:
Study Duration: three months/91 d
Average drinking water consumption): 3747.3 mL/rat => 41.2 ml/rat/d
Average body weight: [91.6 (start) + 450.2 (end)]/2 = 272 g (divided by two to use as mean weight during the study)
10 mg NaVO3/L = 1.51 mg/kg bw/d
50 mg NaVO3/L = 7.57 mg/kg bw/d
Conversion of NOEL (ppm in diet) to NOEL (mg/kg bw /d):
NOEL: 150 ppm V
Duration: 103 d
Food intake: 2,019 g/rat
Body weight (kg bw/rat): 0.5 kg
V ingested reported: 236 mg V/rat/103 d= 2.29 mg V/d
NOELcorrected 4.58 mg V/kg bw/d
Endpoint conclusion
- Endpoint conclusion:
- adverse effect observed
- Dose descriptor:
- LOAEL
- Study duration:
- chronic
- Species:
- rat
- Quality of whole database:
- Several supportive studies exist. A number of studies are available where vanadium compounds were administered; however, they have involved different experimental approaches and designs as well as different dose regimens, and endpoints. For oral exposure, effects are more limited and the different experimental approaches lead to a variety of endpoints measured.
Repeated dose toxicity: inhalation - local effects
Link to relevant study records
- Endpoint:
- chronic toxicity: inhalation
- Type of information:
- experimental study
- Adequacy of study:
- weight of evidence
- Study period:
- 1997-01-06 (first exposure) to 1999-01-04/08 (necropsy date)
- Reliability:
- 3 (not reliable)
- Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
- significant methodological deficiencies
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to same study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to other study
- Reason / purpose for cross-reference:
- reference to other study
- Qualifier:
- no guideline followed
- Principles of method if other than guideline:
- Groups of 50 male and 50 female F344/N rats (approx. 6-7 weeks old) were exposed to V2O5 aerosols at concentrations of 0, 0.5, 1 or 2 mg/m3 by inhalation, 6 hours/d, 5 d/wk, for 104 weeks. The body weight was controlled initially and body weight and clinical finding were recorded every 4 weeks (until week 89) and every 2 weeks from week 92 on. Animals were observed twice daily. Necropsy was performed at study end.
- GLP compliance:
- yes
- Limit test:
- no
- Species:
- rat
- Strain:
- Fischer 344
- Sex:
- male/female
- Details on test animals or test system and environmental conditions:
- TEST ANIMALS
- Source: Taconic Farms, Inc. (Germantown, NY)
- Age at study initiation: average age: 6 or 7 weeks old on the first day of the study
- Weight at study initiation: average body weight for week 1: 134-136 g (males) and 130-105 g (females)
- Housing: housed individually; stainless steel wire bottom (Hazleton Systems, Inc., Aberdeen, MD); cages and racks were rotated weekly.
- Diet: ad libitum, except during exposure periods; NTP-2000 pelleted diet (Zeigler Brothers, Inc., Gardeners, PA), changed weekly
- Water: ad libitum; tap water (Richland, WA, municipal supply water used) via automatic watering system
- Acclimation period: quarantined for 19 days
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
- Temperature (°C): ca. 23.9± ca.2°C (75° ± 3° F)
- Humidity (%): 55% ± 15%
- Air changes (per hr): 15/hour
- Photoperiod (hrs dark / hrs light): 12 hours/day
IN-LIFE DATES: From: 1997-01-06 (first exposure) to 1999-01-4/8 (necropsy date) - Route of administration:
- inhalation: aerosol
- Type of inhalation exposure:
- whole body
- Vehicle:
- air
- Remarks on MMAD:
- MMAD / GSD: MMAD = 1.0-1.3 µm, GSD = 2.3-2.8
- Details on inhalation exposure:
- - The generation and delivery system used in the 16-day special studies and the 2-year studies consisted of a linear dust feeder, a particle attrition chamber, and an aerosol distribution system. The linear dust feeder, a slide-bar dust-metering device, was composed of a shuttle bar, body, outlet port, and hopper. As the compressed-air-driven shuttle bar slid back and forth during generation, the metering port aligned with the hopper, which served as a reservoir for the bulk chemical, and was filled with a small amount of vanadium pentoxide powder. As the shuttle bar slid to the dispersing position, the metering port aligned with a compressed-air port in the body and a puff of air from this port dispersed the vanadium pentoxide into the particle attrition chamber. Generator output was regulated by adjusting the cadence of the shuttle bar. The particle attrition chamber used low fluid energy from an air jet tangential to the chamber to deagglomerate the vanadium pentoxide particles. After deagglomeration, the particles were swept into a classification zone where smaller particles exited to the distribution line; larger particles were thrown to the perimeter of the classifier by centrifugal force and were reentrained into the impacting air jet, and the process was repeated until the particles were sufficiently deagglomerated. The aerosol passed through the distribution lines to the exposure chambers. A pneumatic pump designed by the study laboratory was located at each chamber inlet and drew aerosol from the distribution line into the chamber inlet, where it was diluted with conditioned air to the appropriate concentration. Flow through the distribution line was controlled by Air-Vac pumps (Air-Vac Engineering, Milford, CT), and pressure was monitored by photohelic differential pressure gauges (Dwyer Instruments, Inc., Michigan City, IN).
- The stainless steel chambers (Lab Products, Inc., Harford Systems Division, Aberdeen, MD), were designed so that uniform aerosol concentrations could be maintained throughout the chambers when catch pans were in place. The total active mixing volume of each chamber was 1.7 m³.
CHAMBER ATMOSPHERE CHARACTERIZATION
- The particle size distribution in each chamber was determined prior to the start of all studies, during the first week of the 16-day and 3-month studies, during the first 2 weeks of the 2-year studies, and monthly during the 3-month and 2-year studies.
- For the 16-day special studies and the 2-year studies, a Mercer-style seven-stage impactor was used. The stages (glass coverslips lightly sprayed with silicon) were analyzed by ICP/AES, and the relative mass collected on each stage was analyzed by probit analysis.
OTHER
- The uniformity of aerosol concentration in the inhalation exposure chambers without animals was evaluated before each of the studies began; concentration uniformity with animals present in the chambers was also measured. During the 16-day and 3-month studies, minor excursions in chamber uniformity values were observed in one or more exposure chambers, but these excursions had no impact on the studies. Chamber concentration uniformity was acceptable throughout the 16-day special studies and 2-year studies.
- The stability of vanadium pentoxide in the exposure system was tested with XRD analysis. XRD analyses indicated no detectable build-up of degradation products at a detection limit of approximately 1%. - Analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- yes
- Details on analytical verification of doses or concentrations:
- - During all studies, chamber aerosol concentrations were monitored with real-time aerosol monitors (RAMs) that used a pulsed-light-emitting diode in combination with a silicon detector to sense light scattered over a forward angular range of 45° to 95° by particles traversing the sensing volume. The instruments respond to particles 0.1 to 20 μm in diameter.
- For the 16-day special studies and the 2-year studies, the sampling system consisted of a valve that multiplexed each RAM to two or three exposure chambers and to a HEPA filter and/or the control chamber or room; selection of sampling streams and data acquisition from each RAM was remotely controlled by a computer. Equations for calibration curves were stored in the computers and were used to convert the measured voltages to exposure concentrations.
- Each RAM was calibrated daily during the 16-day and 3-month studies by correlating the measured voltage with vanadium pentoxide concentrations determined by gravimetric analysis of glass fiber filters and one to two times per week during the 2-year studies by ICP/AES or ICP/mass spectrometry analysis of Pallflex® TX40H120WW glass fiber filters. - Duration of treatment / exposure:
- 104 weeks
- Frequency of treatment:
- 6 hours per day, 5 days per week
- Dose / conc.:
- 0.5 mg/m³ air (nominal)
- Dose / conc.:
- 1 mg/m³ air (nominal)
- Dose / conc.:
- 2 mg/m³ air (nominal)
- No. of animals per sex per dose:
- core study: groups of 50 male and 50 female rats
tissue burden analyisis: 40 female rats per exposed group; separate control groups of 15 female rats were used as chamber controls - Control animals:
- yes
- Details on study design:
- - Dose selection rationale: based on the incidences and severities of respiratory lesions and increased lung weights in male and female rats, concentrations of 4 mg/m3 or greater were considered to be too high for use in a 2-year study. The exposure concentrations selected for the 2-year inhalation study in rats were 0.5, 1, and 2 mg/m3.
- Rationale for animal assignment (if not random): randomly into groups of approximately equal initial mean body weights. - Positive control:
- not stated
- Observations and examinations performed and frequency:
- CAGE SIDE OBSERVATIONS: Yes
- Time schedule: twice daily
- The health of the animals was monitored during the studies according to the protocols of the NTP Sentinel Animal Program
DETAILED CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS: Yes
- Clinical findings were recorded every 4 weeks from week 5 through 89 and every 2 weeks from week 92 until the end of the studies
BODY WEIGHT: Yes
- Time schedule for examinations: body weights were recorded on day 1 and every 4 weeks from week 5 through 89 and every 2 weeks from week 92 until the end of the studies
FOOD CONSUMPTION:
- Food consumption for each animal determined and mean daily diet consumption calculated as g food/kg body weight/day: No data
FOOD EFFICIENCY:
- Body weight gain in kg/food consumption in kg per unit time X 100 calculated as time-weighted averages from the consumption and body weight gain data: No data
WATER CONSUMPTION: No data
OPHTHALMOSCOPIC EXAMINATION: No
HAEMATOLOGY: No
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY: No
URINALYSIS: No
NEUROBEHAVIOURAL EXAMINATION: No
IMMUNOLOGY: No
OTHER:
- Tissue Burden Studies: groups of five female rats were evaluated on days 1, 5, 12, 26, 54, 173, 360, and 542;
- Total lung weight, right lung burden, and left lung histopathology were measured in exposed animals at all time points.
- Blood vanadium concentration was measured in all animals at all time points after day 12. Groups of five chamber control animals were bled at each of these time points and returned to their chambers and used for subsequent bleedings. Blood was obtained by cardiac puncture from exposed animals or from the retroorbital sinus of chamber control animals. - Sacrifice and pathology:
- Method of sacrifice: CO2 asphyxiation.
PATHOLOGY: Yes
- Necropsy was performed at study end on all core study animals.
- All organs and tissues were examined for grossly visible lesions, and all major tissues were prepared for microscopic examination.
HISTOPATHOLOGY:
- Complete histopathology was performed on all core study animals. In addition to gross lesions and tissue masses, the following tissues were examined: adrenal gland, bone with marrow, brain, clitoral gland, esophagus, gallbladder (mice only), heart and aorta, large intestine (cecum, colon, and rectum), small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, and ileum), kidney, larynx, liver, lung and mainstem bronchi, lymph nodes (mandibular, mediastinal, mesenteric, and bronchial), mammary gland (except male mice), nose, ovary, pancreas, parathyroid gland, pituitary gland, preputial gland, prostate gland, salivary gland, skin, spleen, stomach (forestomach and glandular), testis (with epididymis and seminal vesicle), thymus, thyroid gland, trachea,
urinary bladder and uterus. - Other examinations:
- Five male and five female rats were randomly selected for parasite evaluation and gross observation of disease.
- Statistics:
- Survival Analyses:
The probability of survival was estimated by the product-limit procedure of Kaplan and Meier (1958) and is presented in the form of graphs. Animals found dead of other than natural causes were censored from the survival analyses; animals dying from natural causes were not censored. Statistical analyses for possible doserelated effects on survival used Cox’s (1972) method for testing two groups for equality and Tarone’s (1975) life table test to identify dose-related trends. All reported P values for the survival analyses are two sided.
Analysis of Continuous Variables:
Two approaches were employed to assess the significance of pairwise comparisons between exposed and control groups in the analysis of continuous variables. Organ and body weight data, which historically have approximately normal distributions, were analyzed with the parametric multiple comparison procedures of Dunnett (1955) and Williams (1971, 1972). Hematology, clinical chemistry, urinalysis, urine concentrating ability, cardiopulmonary, immunotoxicologic, cell proliferation, tissue concentrations, spermatid, and epididymal spermatozoal data, which have typically skewed distributions, were analyzed using the nonparametric multiple comparison methods of Shirley (1977) and Dunn (1964). Jonckheere’s test (Jonckheere, 1954) was used to assess the significance of the dose-related trends and to determine whether a trend-sensitive test (Williams’ or Shirley’s test) was more appropriate for pairwise comparisons than a test that does not assume a monotonic dose-related trend (Dunnett’s or Dunn’s test). Average severity values were analyzed for significance with the Mann-Whitney U test (Hollander and Wolfe, 1973). Treatment effects were investigated by applying a multivariate analysis of variance (Morrison, 1976) to the transformed data to test for simultaneous equality of measurements across exposure concentrations. (for more information see publication) - Clinical signs:
- no effects observed
- Mortality:
- no mortality observed
- Body weight and weight changes:
- no effects observed
- Description (incidence and severity):
- only marginally less for the 2 mg/m3–exposed females
- Food consumption and compound intake (if feeding study):
- not specified
- Food efficiency:
- not specified
- Water consumption and compound intake (if drinking water study):
- not specified
- Ophthalmological findings:
- not specified
- Haematological findings:
- not examined
- Clinical biochemistry findings:
- not examined
- Urinalysis findings:
- not examined
- Behaviour (functional findings):
- not specified
- Immunological findings:
- not specified
- Organ weight findings including organ / body weight ratios:
- not specified
- Gross pathological findings:
- not specified
- Neuropathological findings:
- not specified
- Histopathological findings: non-neoplastic:
- effects observed, treatment-related
- Histopathological findings: neoplastic:
- no effects observed
- Description (incidence and severity):
- Based on the analysis of Starr et al. (2012), effects observed in the male rat are not significant.
- Other effects:
- no effects observed
- Details on results:
- CLINICAL SIGNS AND MORTALITY
- Survival of the animals were similar to the controls
BODY WEIGHT AND WEIGHT GAIN
- Body weights of the animals were similar to the controls except body weight of the 2 mg/m3–exposed females which was less
HISTOPATHOLOGY: NON-NEOPLASTIC
- Non-neoplastic lesions occurred in respiratory system of males and females (lung, larynx, and nose) , and the severities of these lesions generally increased with increasing exposure concentration.
LUNGS:
- Effects in males: alveolar epithelium, hyperplasia (7/50, 24/49, 34/48, 49/50); bronchiole, epithelium hyperplasia (3/50, 17/49, 31/48, 49/50); alveolar epithelium, metaplasia, squamous (1/50, 0/49, 0/48, 21/50); bronchiole, metaplasia, squamous (0/50, 0/49, 0/48, 7/50); inflammation, chronic active (5/50, 8/49, 24/48, 42/50); interstitial, fibrosis (7/50, 7/49, 16/48, 38/50); alveolus, infiltration cellular, histiocyte (22/50, 40/49,45/48, 50/50).
- Effects in females: alveolar epithelium, hyperplasia (4/49, 8/49, 21/50, 50/50); bronchiole, epithelium hyperplasia (6/49, 5/49, 14/50, 48/50); alveolar epithelium, metaplasia, squamous (0/49, 0/49, 0/50, 6/50); inflammation, chronic active (10/49, 10/49, 14/50, 40/50); interstitial, fibrosis (19/49, 7/49, 12/50, 32/50); alveolus, infiltration cellular, histiocyte (26/49, 35/49, 44/50, 50/50).
- Incidences of minimal to mild chronic active inflammation and interstitial fibrosis in the lungs were significantly increased in males exposed to 1 or 2 mg/m3 and females exposed to 2 mg/m3, and the incidences of histiocytic cellular infiltrate of the alveolus were increased in all exposed groups of males and females. The inflammatory lesions were primarily minimal to mild and consisted of interstitial and perivascular infiltrates of mostly mononuclear inflammatory cells that were occasionally within alveoli. Alveolar septa were occasionally thickened by thin strands of eosinophilic fibrillar material (fibrosis). The histiocytic infiltrate was also minimal to mild, consisting of scattered intraalveolar macrophages that contained large amounts of foamy intracytoplasmic material, interpreted as pulmonary surfactant. Additionally, scant amounts of eosinophilic material (surfactant) similar to that observed within alveolar macrophages was also free within alveoli; however, a separate diagnosis was not made. A brownish pigment (pigmentation) was visible in alveolar macrophages in some males and females exposed to 2 mg/m3 and in females exposed to 1 mg/m3; it was a mild change considered of little biological significance and was not further characterized.
LARYNX:
- Effects in males: inflammation, chronic (3/49, 20/50, 17/50, 28/49); respiratory epithelium, epiglottis degeneration (0/49, 22/50, 23/50, 33/49); respiratory epithelium, epiglottis, hyperplasia (0/49, 18/50, 34/50, 32/49); respiratory epithelium, epiglottis, metaplasia, squamous (0/49, 9/50, 16/50, 19/49).
- Effects in females: inflammation, chronic (8/50, 26/49, 27/49, 37/50); respiratory epithelium, epiglottis degeneration (2/50, 33/49, 26/49, 40/50);
respiratory epithelium, epiglottis, hyperplasia (0/50, 25/49, 26/49, 33/50); respiratory epithelium, epiglottis, metaplasia, squamous (2/50, 7/49, 7/49, 16/50).
- There were increased incidences of minimal to mild lesions of the larynx in exposed males and females. The incidences generally increased with increasing exposure concentration and included chronic inflammation of the larynx and degeneration, hyperplasia, and squamous metaplasia of the respiratory epithelium of the epiglottis. The inflammation consisted of a mixture of mononuclear and granulocytic inflammatory cells in the submucosa beneath the epithelium lining the base of the epiglottis, ventral pouch, and caudal larynx. The degeneration of the respiratory epithelium was characterized by a loss or decrease in the height of cilia and shortening of the normally columnar to cuboidal surface epithelial cells lining the laryngeal surface of the base of the epiglottis. Squamous metaplasia was diagnosed when the ciliated cells were replaced by one or more layers of flattened squamous epithelium. In the same area, the respiratory epithelium was mildly thickened in many animals; this change was diagnosed as hyperplasia. These changes are relatively minimal, commonly occur in rats in NTP inhalation studies, and represent a common response to laryngeal injury.
NOSE:
- Effects in males: goblet cell, respiratory epithelium, hyperplasia (4/49, 15/50, 12/49, 17/48)
- Effects in females: goblet cell, respiratory epithelium, hyperplasia (13/50, 18/50, 16/50, 30/50)
- There were increased incidences of mild goblet cell hyperplasia of the nasal respiratory epithelium in all groups of exposed male rats and in females exposed to 2 mg/m3. Increased numbers of goblet cells were most notable in the respiratory epithelium lining the median septum adjacent to the area of the vomeronasal organ.
KIDNEY:
- The incidences of nephropathy were significantly increased in male rats exposed to 1 or 2 mg/m3. Nephropathy is a common lesion in aged rats, particularly males, and has been diagnosed in virtually all males in NTP 2-year studies that used the NIH-07 diet. In those studies, chemical exacerbation of nephropathy was identified by increased severity. With the NTP-2000 diet, the severity of spontaneous nephropathy has been reduced. In this study, the severity of nephropathy was not increased in exposed groups of males. Also, exposed females were not affected. Although the NTP doesn’t have a formal historical control database for nonneoplastic lesions, a review of recent studies indicates that the incidence in the male chamber control group in the current study is low. It is not clear if the increased incidences in this study were related to exposure to vanadium or were a reflection of the low incidence in the control group. Regardless, nephropathy was a relatively weak response and was likely of marginal biological significance.
HISTOPATHOLOGY: NEOPLASTIC (if applicable)
Please note that the following carcinogenic effects as reported in the original study are not statistically significant according to Starr et al. (2012).
LUNG:
- Effects in males: alveolar/ bronchiolar adenoma (4/50, 8/49, 5/48, 6/50); alveolar/bronchiolar carcinoma (0/50, 3/49, 1/48, 3/50); alveolar/ bronchiolar adenoma or carcinoma (4/50, 10/49, 6/48, 9/50)
- Effects in females: none (equivocal findings: alveolar/bronchiolar adenoma (0/49, 3/49, 1/50, 0/50); alveolar/bronchiolar adenoma or carcinoma (0/49, 3/49, 1/50, 1/50)
- Alveolar/bronchiolar neoplasms were present in exposed groups of males and one 2 mg/m3 female. Alveolar/bronchiolar adenomas were present in 0.5 and 1 mg/m3 females. Additionally, one female exposed to 2 mg/m3 had an alveolar/bronchiolar carcinoma. There were no statistically significant increases in the incidences of lung neoplasms in rats.
- There were increased incidences of alveolar epithelial hyperplasia and bronchiole hyperplasia in the lungs of males exposed to 0.5 mg/m3 or greater and females exposed to 1 or 2 mg/m3. The severities of these lesions were increased in 2 mg/m3 males and females. In affected animals, this was essentially a diffuse change with proliferation of epithelium in the distal terminal bronchioles and immediately associated alveolar ducts and alveoli. Normally flattened epithelium was replaced with cuboidal epithelium.
- Increased incidences of squamous metaplasia of the alveoli occurred in male and, to a lesser extent, in female rats exposed to 2 mg/m3. There were a spectrum of changes ranging from minimal to severe. Minimal lesions were characterized by a single alveolus with the thin type I cells which normally line alveoli replaced by one to several layers of squamous epithelium. Severe lesions were much larger, often involving an area approximately 1 cm in diameter. Many alveoli were involved and there was apparent coalescence of the metaplasia. There were also lesions of intermediate severity. Keratin production was a prominent feature of the squamous metaplasia observed in this study. Keratin often filled the affected alveoli, and in some of the lesions, cyst-like structures filled with keratinous material were formed. In a few animals (predominantly males), the squamous metaplasia extended into the distal airways and was diagnosed as bronchiole squamous metaplasia. Commonly dispersed within the squamous lesions were areas of respiratory epithelial metaplasia in which the alveolar epithelium was replaced by tall cuboidal to columnar epithelium with cilia often present and with mucous material filling the alveolar lumen.
UTERUS:
- The incidences of stromal polyp occurred with a positive trend in female rats (chamber control, 6/50; 0.5 mg/m3, 3/50; 1 mg/m3, 7/50; 2 mg/m3, 13/50). However, the incidence in the 2 mg/m3 group was within the historical range in controls. Endometrial stromal polyps are common neoplasms in the F344/N rat in NTP studies. They are benign neoplasms and generally do not progress to malignancy; however, they occasionally do progress to stromal sarcoma. In this study, when the incidences of stromal polyp were combined with the single incidence of stromal sarcoma, the combined incidence in 2 mg/m3 females was significantly increased. The marginal increase in the incidence of stromal polyp and stromal sarcoma (combined) in females exposed to 2 mg/m3 was not considered related to exposure to vanadium pentoxide.
OTHER FINDINGS
LUNG BURDEN STUDIES:
- Histopathology: the left lung lobe from each animal was infused with 10% neutral buffered formalin, and sections were examined microscopically. The purpose was to follow progression of the lung lesions. Following day 1 of exposure, there was an infiltrate of alveolar macrophages in the lungs. With continued exposure, increased numbers of alveolar macrophages, interstitial mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrates, and hyperplasia of alveolar and bronchiolar epithelium were observed. In rats exposed to 2 mg/m3, there was an increase in severity of the hyperplasia between days 54 and 173. An increase in severity was not obvious between days 173 and 360, but hyperplasia appeared more severe on day 542. Hyperplasia was observed in only a few animals exposed to 1 mg/m3 and only on day 542. The minimal fibrosis observed in the 2-year study was not readily apparent on day 542 or earlier.
- Lung weights from exposed female rats increased throughout the study. Although there appeared to be an exposure concentration-related increase in lung weights after day 26 of the study, it was primarily due to increases in lung weights of female rats exposed to 2 mg/m3. In general, lung weights of 0.5 or 1 mg/m3 females were similar.
- Lung burden data appeared proportional to exposure concentration in rats.
- Though deposition patterns were similar between rats and mice, the maximum lung burdens occurred at day 173 in rats. The lung burdens appeared to reach steady state at the lowest exposure concentrations (0.5 mg/m3). A decline in lung burdens was observed. The retention of vanadium in the lungs at 18 months was ca. 13% to 15% in rats. The total lung doses for rats exposed to 0.5, 1, or 2 mg/m3 were estimated to be 130, 175, and 308 μg vanadium, respectively.
- Lung clearance half-times were considerably longer than those observed in the 16-day special studies.
BLOOD:
- Vanadium was detected in the blood at concentrations several orders of magnitude lower than those measured in the lungs of exposed rats, and blood vanadium concentrations in exposed groups were only marginally increased over that of the chamber control group. Overall, blood vanadium concentrations appeared to increase with increasing exposure concentration; however, this proportionality was less clear when the 0.5 and 1 mg/m3 groups were compared.
- Blood vanadium concentrations in all exposed groups appeared to peak on days 26 or 54 after which there was a decline throughout the rest of the study. This response was similar to that seen in lung burdens. However, these changes in concentrations were small, making it difficult to determine if there was an increase in elimination of vanadium from the blood or a decreased absorption from the lung due to reduced deposition, especially at the higher exposure concentrations. - Dose descriptor:
- LOAEC
- Remarks:
- local
- Effect level:
- 0.5 mg/m³ air
- Based on:
- test mat.
- Sex:
- male/female
- Basis for effect level:
- histopathology: non-neoplastic
- Critical effects observed:
- not specified
- Conclusions:
- Survival rates and body weights were not affected in rats exposed to vanadium pentoxide for 2 years. As in the 3-month studies, the respiratory tract was the primary site of toxicity in rats. Under the conditions of this 2-year inhalation study, some evidence of carcinogenic activity of vanadium pentoxide in male F344/N rats and equivocal evidence of carcinogenic activity of vanadium pentoxide in female F344/N rats was reported. Based on the analysis of Starr et al. (2012), the observed carconogenic effects are statistically not significant as follows:
(1) there are not any statistically significant differences in tumor incidence between vanadium pentoxide-treated and concurrent control group male and female rats,
(2) there is weakened evidence from comparisons with the widened historical control tumor incidence ranges that result from use of updated historical control data, and
(3) there is a likelihood that all of the male rats utilized in the vanadium pentoxide bioassay may have had elevated risks of developing alveolar/bronchiolar adenoma even in the absence of vanadium pentoxide exposure.
The genetic toxicology studies ( Salmonella typhimurium gene mutations and Micronucleated erythrocytes Mouse peripheral blood in vivo) show negative results for mutagenic effects.
Exposure to vanadium pentoxide caused a spectrum of non-neoplastic lesions in the respiratory tract (nose, larynx, and lung) including alveolar and bronchiolar epithelial hyperplasia, inflammation, fibrosis, and alveolar histiocytosis of the lung in male and female rats and an unusual squamous metaplasia of the lung in male and female rats. The lowest concentration tested (0.5 mg/m3) represents a LOAEC for local effects in the respiratory tract.
Quality of the NTP study
The NTP carcinogenicity study was introduced in the CLH proposal and by the RAC opinion as a “well-conducted” study. However, there are points that may be considered, drawing the reliability of this study into question:
1. dose-range finding experiments were commissioned by NTP in two different labs (i.e. IITRI and BNL), using identical rat and mice strains but resulting in significantly different effects in the respiratory tract at the same exposure concentrations (e.g. bronchiolar hyperplasia was seen in all mice exposed to 1mg/m³ in the BNL cancer study already after 2 months but not in the IITRI study after 3 months exposure) – see also MacGregor, 2020. The most prominent difference between the two test setups were different aerosol generators. It is worth highlighting that differences in the dust generation methods also lead to significant differences in the acute inhalation toxicity studies reported by Anonymous (2011) and Leuschner (1994). This raises a concern that the effects seen in the chronic inhalation experiment run at BNL may be cause of the test material treatment than by the substance itself.
2. The formation of lung tumours in mice showed a flat, plateau-like dose response with increasing V2O5 concentrations is secondary to chronic inflammatory changes which developed shortly after initiating exposure and persisted throughout the study. The 16-day inhalation study in mice by Schuler et al. (2011) showed lung inflammation as well as increased cell proliferation at the same exposure levels. Thus, the interpretation of tumour data is confounded by the presence of long-term chronic inflammation.
3. Further, the NTP study shows shortcomings in the (i) test item characterisation, which was chemically analysed only 2 years before study start and (ii) the chemical identity of the test item was analysed only once in the inhalation chamber (see also MacGregor 2020, and Duffus, 2007).
4. Levels of vanadium in the blood of untreated control laboratory rodents are typically extremely low and usually below the limit of detection (Roberts et al., 2019; Schuler et al. 2011: < 0.013 µg/g). However, in appendix K to the NTP (2002) report (p304 & 307), the V blood levels in unexposed control mice are reported with 0.26 - 0.5 µg V/g blood. The tap water levels in the city in which the NTP study was conducted and also the NTP 2000 diet that the animals were fed during the study was checked for presence of vanadium contamination; in both cases, vanadium levels are well below 1 ppb, which practically excludes these sources as relevant contributors to the reported blood vanadium levels. Whereas the RAC opinion speculates about a possible analytical or calculation error, we believe this can be ruled out, because (i) the method validation report in the Annexes of the NTP study documents linearity of the analytical method in the required range and also reports LoD and LoQ (LoQ being 0.2 µg V/g blood) (ii) all blood vanadium levels in the NTP are above this LoQ and can therefore not be discounted (iii) NTP acknowledged that the V levels in control animals are far too high but also categorically rule out any analytical errors. They however offer no other explanation
Regarding the relevance of NTP blood vanadium levels, when comparing the vanadium blood levels of the three exposure groups to the NTPs own estimations of resulting blood V concentrations, the inhaled amounts contribute maximally to one third of the blood vanadium. Given that the animals were exposed whole body throughout, the average measured blood V concentrations above control amount to as much as approx. 500 µg V/L blood (highest exposure group). Since diet and water can be ruled out as relevant sources of Vanadium, this likely represents inadvertent ingestional uptake such as translocation from the respiratory to the GI tract as well as grooming etc.
According to the results of the deposition modelling of the mice in the NTP study using the MPPD mode, almost 50% of the inhaled material is translocated to the gastro-intestinal tract. By comparison with the recently published NTP sub-chronic drinking water rodent studies (Roberts et al. 2019) with two different Vanadium substances, such a blood level of Vanadium (500 ug/L blood) would be as much as 5-fold above the blood vanadium resulting from the highest drinking water exposure level of 100 µg V/L. This latter level however constituted the MTD, at which drinking water consumption was already substantially reduced. In consequence, the animals in the NTP study can be assumed to have been orally exposed to levels approx. 5-fold above the sub-chronic MTD; and any oral chronic MTD should not expected to be above the sub-chronic one.
The inhalation exposures in the NTP study are associated at the highest exposure level with blood vanadium levels well above the oral MTD for vanadium. Tumours resulting from this substantial systemic exposure were not observed. Additionally, vanadium pentaoxide only acts as such at the site of contact (such as lungs and GI tract), where its oxidation properties and the acidification during dissolution in aquatic media are likely the main cause of the inflammatory reactions. However, after dissolution vanadium pentaoxide no longer exists as such, but has instead transformed to vanadate in anionic form which no longer has these potent inflammatory properties. This is likely the reason for the complete absence of systemic tumours. In essence, the high vanadium blood levels in the NTP study should be considered a reflection of substantial inhalation and ingestional exposure, which is without systemic carcinogenicity.
All in all, the points raised above raises substantial issues as to the quality of the study and the reliability of the results.
Reference
Chamber concentration uniformity was acceptable throughout the 16-day special studies and 2-year studies.
Endpoint conclusion
- Endpoint conclusion:
- adverse effect observed
- Dose descriptor:
- LOAEC
- 0.5 mg/m³
- Study duration:
- chronic
- Species:
- rat
- Quality of whole database:
- reliable GLP-conform study with V2O5. Findings in rat model may not be relevant for humans.
The LOAEC is expressed as 0.5 mg V2O5 / m3.
Repeated dose toxicity: dermal - systemic effects
Endpoint conclusion
- Endpoint conclusion:
- no study available
Repeated dose toxicity: dermal - local effects
Endpoint conclusion
- Endpoint conclusion:
- no study available
Additional information
Initial comment on grouping and read across
The endpoint repeated dose toxicity via the oral route of the vanadium category substance is not addressed by substance-specific information but rather by read-across of data available for soluble tri-, tetra- and pentavalent vanadium substances as well as for insoluble vanadium substances with zero valency, such as vanadium carbide.
All vanadium substances within the read-across concept represent inorganic substances, including salts or oxides and form the vanadium category. For the substances of the inorganic vanadium substances category, it is assumed that the in vivo bioavailability of the vanadium varies in a predictable manner, which is dependent on the in vitro bioaccessibility of the respective vanadium substance, i.e. all members of the category liberate vanadium ions in aqueous media at different rates, inter alia depending on the chemical structure. Thus, this concept is based on the chemistry / composition of all substances and on experimental studies for (i) water solubility and (ii) in-vitro bioaccessibility: assessment of the solubility and speciation of vanadium substances in five different artificial physiological fluids. Robust summaries for these studies are provided in each registration dossier and a detailed evaluation of the relevance, reliability and adequacy of each study is presented in the individual study records. Based on the in vitro bioaccessibility and the available bridging studies, two read-across groups are defined for the systemic effects following oral exposure, i.e. (i) soluble vanadium substances and (ii) poorly soluble vanadium substances. This endpoint summary addresses the hazard data for the poorly soluble read-across group. Further details on the read-across concept are presented in the report attached to IUCLID section 13.
Oral - animal data:
A number of studies are available reporting findings observed mainly in rats but also in mice orally exposed to soluble tetra- and pentavalent vanadium substances. However, the studies applied different experimental designs and were targeted at investigating specific endpoints. Thus, the different experimental approaches led to results on a variety of endpoints, which is why the weight of evidence approach is applied.
Based on the available data, the following adverse effects were identified: body weight reduction, haematological effects and reduction of antioxidants in tissues and body fluids. These effects are the most consistently reported among a number of investigators (Mountain et al. 1953, Dai et al. 1985, Roberts et al. 2015 and 2019, Zaporowska et al. 1993, Scibior et al. 2005, 2006, 2012).
A detailed review of the oral repeated dose toxicity studies in animals is presented below.
Mountain et al. 1953:Male rats were treated with vanadium pentoxide for up to 103 days. The experimental setup was split into three phases: 1. animals were exposed to 0, 100 and 150 ppm V for 103 days; 2. animals were exposed to 0, 500 and 1000 ppm V and one group-paired fed control for the 500 ppm group for 75 days; 3. animals were exposed to 0 and 500 ppm V and an additional group was fed with a diet containing 500 ppm V and 1.6% methionine for 63 days. In all three setups body weight gain and food intake as well as amount of ingested vanadium were recorded. In the first two setups of the study the cysteine content of hair was determined three times (1. setup: day 0, 60 and 103; 2. setup: day 0, 36 and 75). Additionally, in the first setup, red cell count and haemoglobin was determined before study initiation and at study termination. In the third setup liver to body weight ratio was recorded. According to the author, hair cysteine content decreased dose-dependently in animals exposed to 100, 150, 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium. The food intake was not significantly affected in animals exposed to vanadium. However, animals exposed to 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium showed significantly decreased body weight gains after 75 days (500 and 1000 ppm V) and 63 days (500 ppm V). Animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm vanadium for 103 days showed slightly decreased red cell counts and haemoglobin levels. No effects on liver to body weight ratios were observed in animals exposed to 500 ppm vanadium for 63 days. Since the effects on red cell count and haemoglobin in animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm for 103 days were mild and within historical control ranges of this rat strain and age, the effects were considered to be negligible. Further, cysteine content of rat hair was slightly reduced but the adversity of this effect remains questionable. Since body weight and food consumption in animals exposed to 100 and 150 ppm V were normal and no further adverse effects were observed, mildly decreased values of cysteine in hair is considered not adverse. Consequently, 150 ppm V (equivalent to 4.58 mg V/kg bw/day) represents the NOEL of this study, based on the reduced body weight gain in animals exposed to 500 and 1000 ppm vanadium. This study was rated as RL 3 due to significant methodological deficiencies.
Dai et al. 1994:Four groups of non-diabetic male rats received different concentrations of vanadyl sulfate (VOSO4) in drinking water for 52 weeks. The low dose group received 500 mg VOSO4/L in water for 52 weeks. The mid dose group received 500 mg/L for 1 week followed by 750 mg VOSO4/L in water for 51 weeks. The high dose group received 500 and 750 mg/L for 1 week each followed by 1250 mg VOSO4/L in water for further 50 weeks. Three recovery animals of each group were followed for further 16 weeks after cessation of VOSO4 treatment. Treatment of male rats with different dose levels of vanadyl sulfate in drinking water corresponding to 34, 54 and 90 mg/kg bw/day over 52 weeks did not indicate severe signs of systemic toxicity under the conditions of this study. Body weights were dose-dependently reduced in treatment groups compared to controls, occasionally reaching statistical significance in the low and mid dose groups and at most time points in the high dose group. At study termination (week 52) significant difference in body weight (>10%) compared to control animals was observed in high dose animals only. Body weights of low and mid dose animals were lower (<10%) but not significantly different and thus considered not biologically relevant. Based on significant and biologically relevant effects on body weight in high dose animals, the mid dose level of 54 mg/kg bw/day represents a NOAEL. This study was rated as RL 2, comparable to guideline study with acceptable restrictions.
Domingo et al. 1985:Sodium metavanadate in drinking water was given to four groups, each consisting of 10 male Sprague-Dawley rats, at concentrations of 0, 5, 10 and 50 ppm. Liver and renal function parameters were determined in blood at the end of exposure period and organ weights were taken (liver, kidneys, heart, spleen, lung). Heart, liver, lungs, kidneys, spleen, stomach, small and large intestine were histopathologically examined in three rats of each group. Oral administration of NaVO3 via drinking water to groups of male rats over 3 months at concentrations of 0, 5, 10 and 50 ppm caused mild, dose-dependent lesions in kidneys, lungs and spleen with the highest incidence in the 50 ppm group, and increased plasma concentrations of protein, urea and uric acid in the high dose group. Thus, the highest dose level (7.57 mg/kg bw/d NaVO3) represents a clear LOAEL, and the mid dose level (1.51 mg/kg bw/d NaVO3) represents a NOAEL. This study was rated as RL 3 due to significant methodological deficiencies.
Zaporowska et al. 1993:Male and female Wistar rats were orally exposed to ammonium metavanadate (0, 10 or 50 mg V/L ) in drinking water for 4 weeks. Body weight gain, food and fluid uptake as well as various haematological and biochemical parameters were determined. Effects on palatability of vanadium containing fluids was observed at 50 mg V/L (significant in males but not in females). Mild and not dose-dependent effects were observed on body weight gain. Additionally, slight but significant effects on erythrocytes, reticulocytes and haemoglobin as well as L-ascorbic acid level in plasma and erythrocytes were observed in both dose groups. As no dose dependency was observed, mild effects on body weight gain were considered negligible. Significant effects on haematological parameters were considered to be mild and within historical control ranges of this rat strain and age (discussed below). Effects on L-ascorbic acid level in erythrocytes and plasma were also not considered relevant since the adversity of this effect is unclear (discussed below) and no further adverse effect was observed. Based on this, the NOEL of this study is considered to be 50 mg V/L drinking water, which is equivalent to 4.93 and 6.65 mg V/kg bw/day in males and females, respectively. This study is well reported, however, no guideline was followed and only limited parameters were analysed. Erythrocytes and haemoglobin and reticulocytes were slightly but significantly changed in both dose groups and sexes. These changes were not considered to be adverse as they were minor compared to control and within historical control data of this rat strain and age (e.g. Kort, M. et al. (2020) and Giknis, M. & Clifford, C.B. (2008)). Apart from the above-mentioned minor effects on some haematological parameters, the level of L-ascorbic acid was significantly decreased in plasma of low and high dose males but not in females. The same author reported one year later (please refer to Zaporowska 1994) that male and female rats exposed to doses of up to 0.30 mg V/ml showed clearly reduced L-ascorbic acid values in liver, kidney, adrenals and spleen. Thus, exposure to ammonium metavanadate seems to correlate with decreased L-ascorbic acid values in different tissues and body fluids. However, as no systemic toxicity or any other effect was observed, it remains unclear whether mild to moderate L-ascorbic acid depression is or results in any adverse effects. In a publication of Chan & Reade (1996) Wistar Shionogi rats, unable to synthesize L-ascorbic acid, were supplemented with different doses of L-ascorbic acid to determine the L-ascorbic acid requirements in Wistar rats. After 26 weeks, all animals survived and showed no clinical signs of scurvy. The average weekly body weight gain was normal. A severe L-ascorbic acid deficiency would include perinasal and peri-and intra-oral haemorrhage, joint or intramuscular haemorrhage, weakened or fractured hind limbs, delayed wound healing and a failure to thrive (Clemetson, 1989). As none of these clinical signs were observed in studies reported by Zaporowska (1993, 1994) or Chan & Reade (1996), it is assumed that this mild to moderate L-ascorbic acid depression observed in this study is not an adverse effect. It has been demonstrated that the toxicity of vanadium increases with its valency. Thus, compounds containing pentavalent V, such as ammonium metavanadate, are most poisonous. It is known that pentavalent V enters cells through anion channels, i.e. phosphate or sulfate channels. In cells, pentavalent V is reduced to divalent VO by some reducing compounds such as L-ascorbic acid and thiol-containing cysteine. Thus, the reported reduction of L-ascorbic acid in plasma and erythrocytes and also in several tissues (Zaporowska, 1994) is most likely the result of an enhanced consumption/reduction activity of this compound. However, in contrast to humans, rodents are able to synthesize L-ascorbic acid. Thus, it can be assumed that this reduction of L-ascorbic acid will induce re-synthesis and reduction of L-ascorbic acid is an adaptive but not an adverse effect. Apart from that, it is also noteworthy that humans are not able to synthesize L-ascorbic acid. Based on this, it is assumed that the protective reduction of pentavalent V to divalent VO is performed by another reducing substance and thus, it remains questionable whether a reduction of L-ascorbic acid in rats is relevant for humans. This study was rated as RL 3 due to significant methodological deficiencies.
The following studies reported similar effects on haematological parameters and body weight and also a few other signs of systemic toxicity, but were regarded as supportive, as several shortcomings in study design and reporting led to limited relevance in risk assessment.
Scibior et al. (2012) and Scibior et al. (2018):A group of 16 male Wistar rats received sodium metavanadate (13.03 mg vanadium/kg bw/day) in drinking water for 12 weeks. The following parameters were investigated: clinical signs, mortality, physical appearance, motor behaviour, food/water consumption, haematology, clinical chemistry, and urinalysis (iron concentration only). Furthermore, atomic absorption measurements of vanadium, magnesium, iron, copper and zinc were conducted in selected biological material (liver, spleen, faeces, red blood cells, and urine). Lastly, femoral diaphysis were prepared and analysed for oxidative stress markers (superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, glutathione S-transferase, total glutathione, glutathione disulfide, lipid peroxidation) and L-ascorbic acid (also in the liver) as well as metal content (vanadium, magnesium, calcium, iron, copper and zinc).
Scibior et al. (2012):After the administration of 13.03 mg/kg bw/day of sodium metavanadate in drinking water some rats had gastrointestinal disturbances. Loose stool/diarrhoea was observed. No mortality was observed in the study. Furthermore, the treatment with sodium metavanadate led i) to a decrease in fluid and food intake and body weight gain, ii) to the development of microcytic-hypochromic anaemia in the animals with excessive iron disposition in liver and spleen, unaltered plasma iron level and enhanced zinc concentration in red blood cells, characterized by a reduced haemoglobin level and haematocrit, unchanged counts of erythrocytes and reticulocytes, lowered total iron-binding capacity and elevated transferrin saturation, iii) disturbed Cu homeostasis, but iv) did not influence the leucocyte count and the plasma total antioxidant status.
Scibior et al. (2018):Vanadium alone did not significantly alter the thiobarbituric reactive substances and the activity of superoxide dismutase compared with the control but reduced slightly the glutathione reductase activity and the L-ascorbic acid level. It also markedly lowered the activity of catalase and glutathione peroxidase but elevated the activity of glutathione transferase and the hepatic L-ascorbic acid level to some degree.
Further, the vanadium concentration in the bone of the treatment group increased, whereas that of magnesium decreased compared with those in the control group. The total content of zinc and calcium did not change markedly in the treatment group compared to the control group.
In conclusion, the results provided evidence that the concentration of vanadium did not enhance the lipid peroxidation in rat bones. Vanadium administered disrupted the antioxidant defence mechanisms and homeostasis of some metals in bone tissue, which may consequently affect the balance in the activities of osteoblastic and osteoclastic cells.
Scibior & Zaporowska 2007:Outbred 2-month old male albino Wistar rats received for a period of 12 weeks vanadium metavanadate in drinking water at a concentration of 0.1 mg V/mL (equivalent to 8.63 mg V/kg bw/day). The control group received deionized drinking water. Food, fluid and water intakes were monitored daily and rats were weighed weekly. After 12 weeks, liver and kidney weights were recorded and the content of L-ascorbic acid in liver and kidney was analysed. Further, GSH and GSSG were determined in liver and kidney. The content of vanadium (V) in feed was analysed by ICP-AES. V, Fe, Zn and Cu were determined in liver and kidney by ICP-AES. Significant effects on GSH and GSSG level and GSH/GSSG ratio were observed in liver and kidney. Moreover, relative weights of liver and kidney were significantly increased. However, the slight effect on organ weights is considered to be small and thus an adaptive but not an adverse effect. Thus, based on the adverse effects on GSH and GSSG level and GSH/GSSG ratio in liver and kidney, the LOAEL of this study is considered to be 8.63 mg V/kg bw/day. This study is well reported, however, no guideline was followed and only limited parameters were analysed. As no details on food and water intake were reported, it remains unclear if the palatability of vanadium containing drinking water was decreased. The author reported that GSH and GSSG level were slightly but significantly decreased in liver and kidney and vanadium levels in both organs were significantly increased. The same author reported a few years before that the levels of L-ascorbic acid were decreased in liver, spleen, kidney and adrenals as well as in plasma and erythrocytes (Zaporowska 1993, 1994). Both, L-ascorbic acid and GSH/GSSG (a disulfide derived from two glutathione molecules), are involved in detoxifying pentavalent vanadium compounds (as discussed in Zaporowska 1993, 1994). As shown in this study, vanadium was present in liver and kidney while in both organs levels of GSH and GSSG were reduced. Thus, the reported reduction of GSH and GSSG was most likley the result of an enhanced consumption/reduction activity of these compounds during detoxification of pentavalent vanadium. The fact that all cells are capable of synthesizing GSH and consumption of GSH initiates re-analysis of GSH most likely explains the slightly increased organ weights of liver and kidney. Thus, it is assumed that slightly affected organs weights were an adaptive but not an adverse effect.
Zaporowska et al. 1994:As reported in several other studies, effects on palatability of vanadium containing fluids were observed in high dose groups. Significant and dose-dependent decreases were observed in L-ascorbic acid levels in spleen, liver, adrenals and kidneys in males exposed to 0.15 and 0.30 mg V/mL and females exposed to 0.05, 0.15 and 0.3 mg V/mL. However, as the adversity of this effect remains questionable (discussed below) and no systemic toxicity was observed, this effect is not considered to be adverse and thus not taken into account for NOAEL setting. Based on this, 0.30 mg V/mL (equivalent to 22.06 mg V/kg bw/day in males and 26.62 mg V/kg bw/day in females) represents the NOEL. This study is well reported, however, no guideline was followed and only limited parameters were analysed. Significant and dose-dependent decreases were observed in L-ascorbic acid levels in spleen, liver, adrenals and kidneys in males exposed to 0.15 and 0.30 mg V/mL and females exposed to 0.05, 0.15 and 0.3 mg V/mL. Zaporwoska et al. (1993) reported already one year before that L-ascorbic acid levels were decreased in plasma and erythrocytes in rats exposed to ammonium metavanadate (see discussion above).
Scibior et al. 2005:Male Wistar rats were exposed to sodium metavanadate in drinking water (0.1 mg V/mL) for 6 weeks. Calculated average uptake of V was 8.35 ± 0.70 mg/kg/day. Food and fluid intake was reduced, which is however most likely a result of reduced palatability. Body weight gain was slightly affected (approx. 14 % reduction) but not significantly different compared to controls. An increase in erythrocyte count, a decrease in the mean corpuscular haemoglobin (MCH) and mean corpuscular haemoglobin conc. (MCHC) was observed in the treatment group. No statistically significant decrease in the number of leukocytes, haematocrit and haemoglobin was observed in test animals. Based on these results, 8.35 mg V/kg bw/day is considered to be the lowest observed adverse effect level (LOAEL).
Scibior et al. 2006:In this study, vanadium at the dose of 10.7 mg/kg bw/d consumed by rats with their drinking water for 6 weeks caused a significant decrease in food and fluid intakes, body weight gain, RBC count, Hb level, and MCV and MCH values, whereas no significant differences in WBC count were observed in these animals compared to the control group. Additionally, vanadium at the tested dose resulted in a significant decrease in L-ascorbic acid concentration in plasma and caused a significant increase in MDA concentration in RBC, whereas no significant differences in Total Antioxidant Status level in plasma of rats were shown compared to the controls. Moreover, vanadium treated rats had a higher vanadium concentration in the plasma than the control animals. Based on these results, the lowest observed adverse effects level (LOAEL) is considered to be 10.69 mg V/kg bw/day.
Susic et al. 2006:The study was conducted in male rats with sodium metavanadate in the diet for 24 weeks. Groups of rats received 0, 300 or 3000 ppm NaVO3 in the diet. Investigations: systolic blood pressure, heart rate and body weight, renal functions, haematological parameters, cardiac output, total peripheral resistance, determination of plasma V concentration and weight of the right ventricular wall of the heart. Sub-chronic dietary treatment of rats with NaVO3 over 24 weeks (300 or 3000 ppm) did not affect blood pressure, but induced an increase in total peripheral resistance and a decrease in cardiac output in both groups. Haematocrit was significantly increased and plasma, blood and extracellular fluid volumes decreased in the high dose group. Renal function parameters were not affected by treatment of rats with sodium vanadate.
Higashino et al. 1983:Female SD rats either on normal or high potassium intake were exposed to 5 or 25 ppm vanadium metavanadate for 2 weeks. Body weight was recorded weekly and clinical signs as well as food intake were recorded. At study termination blood was collected and organ weights were recorded. Urine was examined twice for endogenous creatine and Na and K fractional excretion. Additionally, the vanadium concentration in different organs were analysed and the plasma concentration of Na and K was determined. Further, the specific activity of Na-K-ATPase in different tissues was determined. Vanadium exposure had no influence on clinical signs and food and water intake and body weight gain was not affected either. Haematological parameters and urinalysis were not affected by vanadium. Despite extremely high tissue levels of vanadium, no effect of the element on the basal activity of Na-K-ATPase could be observed. As no adverse effects, except elevated vanadium levels in different tissues, were observed, the NOAEL of this study is 25 ppm (equivalent to 2129.5 ± 91.2 meq/kg bw/day, highest concentration of rats exposed to normal potassium intake, high potassium concentration/intake was not considered here).
Conclusion
Altogether, available studies on oral tetra- and pentavalent vanadium compound exposure report significant and biological relevant effects on body weight, indicating that vanadium compounds induce systemic toxicity.
In addition, mild but significant effects on haematological parameter were consistently reported. Effects included reduced haemoglobin, reduced haematocrit, reduced mean cell haemoglobin concentrations, reduced mean corpuscular haemoglobin and mean corpuscular volume as well as elevated reticulocyte counts. Erythrocytes were consistently decreased except in the study of Scibior et al. 2005, which reported a slight but significant increase of erythrocytes in sodium metavanadate treated animals. In contrast, white blood cells were consistently unaffected. Although most of the reported effects on haematological parameters were only mild and in most cases within historical control ranges of the respective rat strain and age, the almost consistent reduction of erythrocytes and haematocrit and increase in reticulocytes indicates that tetra- and pentavalent vanadium compounds induce anaemic effects by reducing erythrocytes, which in turn triggers an erythropoietic response.
The fact that evidence of haematological effects was also observed following 90-day inhalation exposure to vanadium pentoxide, in the absence of other remarkable systemic toxicity (NTP, 2002), increases the confidence in this being an appropriate critical effect for oral exposure from the available dataset. Additional support for the reliability of this endpoint comes from a study by Hogan (Comparative erythropoietic effects of three vanadium compounds, 2000), where haematological effects were demonstrated following IV injection of three different vanadium compounds each with a different valence state (vanadium chloride (V-III); vanadyl sulphate (V-IV); and sodium orthovanadate (V-V)).
In addition to the haematological effects, Scibior and Zaporowska reported in several studies with sodium metavanadate or ammonium metavanadate, that the level of L-ascorbic acid and glutathione in plasma and erythrocytes as well as in different tissues is markedly decreased. The adversity of this effect remains unclear, as no other adverse effects were observed. However, a possible explanation for this significant reduction may be, that vanadium, known to be present in several tissues and body fluids, is detoxified by L-ascorbic acid and glutathione. Thus, the reduction is most likely the result of an enhanced consumption of these substances. However, as humans are not capable to synthesize L-ascorbic acid, it is unknown whether or not this effect is relevant for humans.
National Toxicology Programme
It is to be noted, that the registrant is aware that the National Toxicology Programme (NTP) in the US nominated tetra- and pentavalent vanadium forms (sodium metavanadate, NaVO3, CAS 13718-26-8; and vanadium oxide sulphate, VOSO4, CAS 27774-13-6), i.e. species present in drinking water and dietary supplements in 2007 (http://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/). The NTP testing program foresees the conduct of animal studies via oral route (drinking water and feed) on VOSO4 & NaVO3 as follows:
- Genetic toxicology studies, i.e. the Salmonella gene mutation assays, with NaVO3 and VOSO4 - negative
-14 days dose-range finding experiments in Sprague-Dawley rats and B6C3F1/N mice (dose rats and mice: 0, 125, 250, 500, 1000, 2000 mg/L) – completed (Roberts et al. 2015)
- 90 days with Sprague-Dawley rats and B6C3F1/N mice (dose rats and mice: 0, 31.3, 62.5, 125, 250, or 500 ppm) – ongoing, first results presented below (Roberts et al. 2019)
- Perinatal dose-range finding study: gestation day 6 (GD 6) until postnatal day 42 (PND 42) with Harlan Sprague-Dawley rats - ongoing, first results presented below (Roberts et al. 2019)
- 28 days immunotoxicity study (dosed-water) with female B6C3F1/N mice (dose: 0, 31.3, 62.5, 125, 250, or 500 ppm) - ongoing
It can reasonably be anticipated that these studies will be of high quality and relevance, and thus will serve as a more robust basis than the current data base with all its shortcomings.
In the study by Roberts et al. 2015, vanadium oxide sulfate was administered in drinking water at concentrations of 83.8, 167.5, 335, 670, and 1340 mg/L (equivalent to 11.7, 23.2, 35.6, 54.5, and 77.2 mg/kg/day for males and 10.0, 16.9, 28.4, 40.7, and 56.0 mg/kg/day for females). No mortality was observed at any dose, no clinical signs were observed in the 83.8, 167.5, and 335 mg/L groups, whereas clinical abnormalities (thin appearance, hunched posture, and ruffled coats) were seen in male and female mice in the 670 and 1340 mg/L groups, which were related to the body weight effects. At the 83.8, 167.5, and 335 mg/L groups group mean body weight of males and females were comparable with the vehicle group. Body weight reductions were observed in the 670 and 1340 mg/L groups, which however were significant only in the 1340 mg/L groups at study termination. Decreases in feed consumption were observed at 1340 mg/L in males and females, and were consistent with body weight effects. Water consumption per kilogram body weight (g/kg/day) decreased with increasing vanadium oxide sulfate concentration for both male and female mice. Although test item intake (mg/kg/day) increased with increasing concentration in drinking water, the increase was not dose proportional due to decreased palatability. Lastly, numerous statistically significant organ weight alterations were evident, although the vast majority of these alterations were proportional to, or at least followed the same trend as, terminal body weights. Reductions in absolute thymus and thymus-to-body weight ratios were apparent for male and female mice in the 1340 mg/L group, and in females in the 670 mg/L group, possibly due to stress associated with substance exposure and reduced water intake.
Overall, a confounding variable in this study is the reduced water consumption, which appears to be a cause of decreased palatability. The reduced water consumption observed in this study was accompanied with reduced body weight at the highest dose levels.
Due to the limited study design typical for a dose-range finding experiment (detailed clinical observations, haematology, clinical chemistry, and histopathology missing; limited organ weight determination) and severe confounder of reduced water intake, the study is used as supplementary information only.
Sodium metavanadate exposure in drinking water resulted in survival of 100 % of males and females in the 0, 125 and 250 mg/L groups, 80 % of males in the 500 mg/L group, and all females in the 500 mg/L group (125, 250 and 500 mg/L are equivalent to 18.364, 36.065, and 58.216 mg/kg/day for males and 15.247, 26.446, and 38.455 mg/kg/day for females, respectively). Due to early deaths, clinical observations, reduced body weights, and decreases in water and food consumption, animals in the 1000 and 2000 mg/L groups (equivalent to 59.587 and 109.377 mg/kg/day for males and 48.750 and 46.736 mg/kg/day for females, respectively) were terminated early on Day 8 (males) and Day 9 (females). Clinical abnormalities were limited to males and females in the 500, 1000 and 2000 mg/L groups, including shallow or rapid breathing, ruffled coat, abnormal gait, hunched posture, lethargy and/or thin appearance.
At study termination, body weight reduction was apparent in males and females in the 500 mg/L group. Reductions in food mean consumption (g/day) were no longer apparent when food consumption was normalized to body weight (g/kg/day) suggesting food intake was proportional to body weight at the 500 mg/L concentration. Effects on water consumption were apparent for males and females in the 500 mg/L groups, but when normalized to body weight, these effects indicated water consumption was proportional to body weight for these groups. Mice in the 1000 and 2000 mg/L groups exhibited more pronounced toxicity (i.e., mortality, moribundity, and clinical abnormalities) related to body weight effects whereas 80 %of males and 100 % of females in the 500 mg/L group survived to study termination. Thus, palatability issues may have contributed to body weight reductions in the 1000 and 2000 mg/L groups.
Organ weight alterations were noted in the heart, lungs, and ovary (right and left) across all exposure concentrations, whereas reductions in thymus and liver weights were noted in the 500 mg/L group only.
Overall, a confounding variable in this study is the reduced water consumption, which might be due to palatability, and the potential dehydration of the animals. Some of the clinical signs can be attributed to dehydration. In addition, lower water consumption might have caused the body weight reduction observed at the 2000 mg/L dose level.
Due to the limited study design, short exposure duration of only 14 days, restricted examination of the animals (detailed clinical observations, haematology, clinical chemistry, and histopathology missing; limited organ weight determination), and lack of reporting the individual data, the study will not be used for hazard and risk assessment purposes but as supplementary information.
In the study by Roberts et al. (2019), time-mated F0 Hsd:Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to sodium metavanadate and vanadyl sulfate at concentrations of 0, 31, 63, 125, 250, and 500 mg/L and 0, 21, 42, 84, 168, and 335 mg/L, respectively via drinking water on GD 6. Groups of male and female F1 animals were exposed during gestation, lactation and 13-weeks post-weaning (5 animals for biological sampling). Dams/pups exposed to sodium metavanadate at 250 and 500 mg/L in drinking water exhibited moribundity at birth, failure to thrive, and higher moribundity during lactation. Lower body weights were observed in dams during gestation and lactation, and in pups continuing until study termination 13 weeks post-weaning. Vanadyl sulfate, up to 335 mg/L in drinking water, was well tolerated in time-mated rats during gestation and lactation, and their pups during lactation and up to 13-weeks post weaning.
In study by Roberts et al. (2019), groups of 10 male and 10 female B6C3F1/N mice were exposed to sodium metavanadate and vanadyl sulfate at concentrations of 0, 31, 63, 125, 250, and 500 mg/L and 0, 21, 42, 84, 168, and 335 mg/L, respectively via drinking water for a duration of 13 weeks. Sodium metavanadate in drinking water resulted in lower body weights and water consumption at 500 mg/L in adult mice. Mice exposed to higher concentrations of sodium metavanadate also had lower thymus weight. Lastly, mice exposed to higher (125, 150, 500 mg/L) concentrations of sodium metavanadate exhibited increase in erythrocytes and reticulocytes and decreases haematocrit and haemoglobin. Vanadyl sulfate, up to 335 mg/L in drinking water, was well tolerated in adult mice.
The results of NTP studies by Roberts et al presented above are not yet fully accessible or published, since the review process is still ongoing. The results presented above are based on a 2019 congress abstract/poster. A complete robust study summary will be provided in the dossier upon availability of the data.
Inhalation - animal data:
The most informative study is the standard NTP chronic inhalation carcinogenicity study (NTP 2002) using V2O5. In this investigation, there was a statistical increase in lung tumours in mice of both sexes, but not in rats (Starr, 2012).
In mice, survival rates of male mice exposed to 4 mg/m³ was less than that of chamber controls, and mean body weights of male mice exposed to 4 mg/m³ and all exposed groups of female mice were generally less than those of the chamber controls throughout the study. As in the 3-month studies, the respiratory tract was the primary site of toxicity. Under the conditions of this 2-year inhalation study there was evidence of carcinogenic activity of vanadium pentoxide in male and female B6C3F1 mice based on increased incidences of alveolar/bronchiolar neoplasms. Exposure to vanadium pentoxide caused a spectrum of non-neoplastic lesions in the respiratory tract (nose, larynx, and lung) including alveolar and bronchiolar epithelial hyperplasia, inflammation, fibrosis, and alveolar histiocytosis of the lung in male and female mice. Hyperplasia of the bronchial lymph node occurred in female mice. The lowest concentration tested (1 mg/m³) represents a LOAEC for local effects in the respiratory tract.
Pulmonary reactivity was investigated in a subchronic inhalation study in cynomolgus monkeys (duration 6 months) with divanadium pentaoxide. The results showed a concentration-dependent impairment in pulmonary function, characterized by airway obstructive changes (pre-exposure challenges) accompanied by a significant influx of inflammatory cells recovered from the lung by bronchoalveolar lavage. Subchronic V2O5 inhalation did not produce an increase in V2O5 reactivity, and cytological, and immunological results indicate the absence of allergic response.
Inhalation - human data:
Regarding the preferential use of human data in risk assessments for human health, a respective statement is attached below.
There are several epidemiological studies linking upper respiratory symptoms to vanadium pentoxide exposure (Kiviluoto, 1980; Kiviluoto et al., 1979a; Lewis, 1959, Zenz and Berg, 1967 Zenz et al. 1962). Long-term chronic exposure data of workers in the vanadium industry are reported in several publications. In a factory manufacturing vanadium pentaoxide, 63 workers exposed to V2O5at concentrations of 0.1 to 3.9 mg V/m³measured as total dust for 11 years (average 0.2-0.5 mg V/m³) did not have an increased prevalence of upper respiratory symptoms in the case study by Kiviluoto et al (1979a,b, 1980, 1981a,b).
Kiviluoto et al. (1979b) did not observe any differences in the anterior and posterior rhinoscopy in the exposed groups after 11 years of exposure to average V2O5levels of 0.2-0.5 mg V/m³as listed above. Furthermore, there was no difference in the number of blood vessels between the exposed and non-exposed groups. However, the number of neutrophils in the nasal smears and the number of plasma cells in the nasal mucosa were increased indicative of a protective mechanism in the mucosa. Other examined factors of the biopsies and cell findings did not differ between the exposed workers and the controls. Chest radiographs and lung function tests did not reveal any differences. After further 7-11 months of V2O5exposure at concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 0.04 mg V/m³ measured as total dust, a subsequent reexamination revealed that the cell findings did not indicate any further significant changes between the studied exposed groups, and that there were no significant changes in the number of eosinophils of cytological and histological samples.
Altogether, no pneumoconiosis and no other signs indicative of allergic inflammation, including nasal catarrh, cough, phlegm, were observed by Kiviluoto et al. in the exposed subjects working for 11 years under these occupational conditions.
Other epidemiological data support that respiratory symptoms are observed at exposure concentrations of V2O5that are above 0.1 mg/ V/m³, and are summarized in the following table
Table: Epidemiological studies of V2O5 exposure
Subjects |
V2O5 Dose [mg V /m³] |
Exposure duration |
Symptoms |
study |
24 workers |
0.1 - 0.93 mean PS < 5 μm |
|
eye, nose, throat irritation; cough; wheezing, nasal mucosa, rales, rhonchi; injected pharynx and green tongue |
Lewis, 1959 |
2 volunteers |
1 |
8 h |
cough, no eosinophilia, normal white blood cell count & cell patterns, no effects on urinalysis, normal lung function |
Zenz & Berg, 1967 |
5 volunteers |
0.2 (PS: 98 % < 5 μm) |
8 h |
loose cough, no eosinophilia, normal white blood cell count & cell patterns, no effects on urinalysis, normal lung function, no detectable V in the blood |
Zenz & Berg, 1967 |
2 volunteers |
0.1 |
8 h |
formation of mucus |
Zenz & Berg, 1967 |
3 of 18 workers |
> 0.5 mean PS < 5 μm |
24 h |
inflamed throat, dry cough, burning eyes, no wheeze |
Zenz et al. (1962) |
11 volunteers
|
0.4 condensation aerosol |
|
tickling, itching, dryness of mouth mucosa |
Pazhynic, 1967 |
5 of 11 volunteers |
0.16 |
|
mild signs of irritation |
Pazhynic, 1967 |
11 volunteers |
0.08 |
|
no notice of symptoms |
Pazhynic, 1967 |
8 volunteers (4 workers + 4 trainees) |
0.028 – 0.062 |
8 h/d, 5 d |
no notice of symptoms (i.e. neurobehavioural, neuro-psychological, psychosomatic & psychological effects) |
Hörtnagl et al. 1994 |
The Scientific Committee on Occupational Exposure Limit summarized these studies as follows:„In workers exposed to dust containing vanadium (as vanadium pentaoxide) 0.2-0.5 mg/m³ for about 11 years, irritants effects on the mucous membranes of the upper respiratory tract were reported. After hygienic improvements, the same workers were exposed to VP concentrations in the range of 0.01-0.04 mg/m³ for about 10 months. No worsening of the irritant effects observed as a consequence of the previous exposure was reported for this low-level exposure. In these workers, the exposure did not cause any pathological effects on the blood picture, the cysteine level in the hair, or the respiratory function (Kiviluoto et al., 1979a,b, 1980, 1981a,b; Kiviluoto, 1980).
Kiviluoto et al (1979a,b, 1980, 1981a,b): in their studies on 63 males exposed in a vanadium factory for 11 years at concentrations in the range of 0.1-3.9 mg/m³(estimated average concentrations 0.2-0.5 mg/m³) and after a further 7-11 month later when concentrations had been reduced to 0.01-0.04 mg/m³studied nasal smears and biopsies. The findings were consistent with irritant effects. Eosinophils did not differ between exposed and non-exposed, nor did IgE-antibody levels. Although exposed workers complained significantly more often of wheezing, pulmonary function tests did not differ. There is, thus, little evidence indicating sensitizing effects on the respiratory tract. The known irritant effects of VP can well explain effects on the respiratory tract including rhinitis, bronchial hyper-reactivity, wheeze, asthma as well as bronchitis…
For respiratory tract irritation, and more generally speaking for upper and lower airways effects, dose-response relationships could be obtained in both experimental animals and humans. It can be assumed that 0.04 mg/m³ has to be considered as a NOEL in occupationally exposed subjects (10 months), while in rodents a NOEL could be concluded at an exposure level of 2 mg/m³(B6C3F1 mice, m. f., inhalation, 6h/day, 5d/w for 16 days) and of 1 mg/m³ (F344/N rats, m. f., inhalation, 6h/day, 5d/w for 14 weeks)…
It appears that exposure to concentrations <0.1 mg/m³do not induce irritating effects on the respiratory tract.(SCOEL/SUM/62 Final, January 2004)“
Evidence from animal and human data suggests that exposure to elevated V2O5 concentrations may result in irritating effects on the respiratory system. However, human data were used as point of departure for the DNEL derivation because long-term chronic data are available from workers exposed to vanadium dust using a sensitive indicator of irritation (cytology), a population similar to the target population (workers of the vanadium industry), and to decrease uncertainty for interspecies differences in sensitivity.
Therefore, the NOAEC of 0.04 mg V /m³(measured as total dust) for humans exposed occupationally for 11 years to V2O5dust was used as POD for the DNEL derivation.
Justification for classification or non-classification
Local effects on the respiratory tract are considered relevant for divanadium pentaoxide. Divanadium pentaoxide is classified as Specific target organ toxicity — repeated exposure 1 according to commission Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008.
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