NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday 14 January 2002
CONTACT:
Jeanne Stuart McVey, Communications Liaison
tel: 202-686-2210, ext. 316; jeannem@pcrm.org
DuPont Cancels Eye-Damaging Tests on Rabbits
Doctors Endorse Use of Internationally Validated Nonanimal Alternatives
Washington, D.C.The Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine (PCRM) reports that DuPont has withdrawn a chemical test plan calling for eye and
skin irritancy tests on live rabbits.
DuPont had planned to conduct potentially blinding tests as part of the High
Production Volume (HPV) Challenge, a controversial program launched by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) in 1998. After proposing the tests to the EPA, DuPont became the
target of criticism from health and animal welfare advocates.
PCRM staff scientist Nicole Cardello, M.H.S., reviewed DuPont's proposed experiments
for dinitriles, chemicals used in the manufacture of rubber, nylon, and other materials.
Ms. Cardello found that these substances were already sufficiently understood, and
additional data would not change the way they are handled in the workplace, where they are
already tightly controlled. In addition, internationally accepted nonanimal alternatives
for the proposed tests are recommended and readily available.
"The proposed eye and skin irritancy tests on rabbits would not have yielded any
meaningful data, and DuPont was right to withdraw them," states PCRM's Nicole
Cardello, M.H.S., a health science expert. "With a goal of protecting people who
might come into contact with dinitriles, it makes more sense to examine existing
occupational information. If further data are needed, there are numerous, validated
nonanimal alternatives such as Corrositex, which DuPont has been using for more than five
years."
PCRM's analyses of DuPont's proposed test plans were submitted during a 120-day public
comment period mandated by the HPV program. On Friday 11 January, PCRM submitted a
detailed analysis of the test plan for the dinitrile category; in a second set of
comments, PCRM challenged a test plan for dicarboxylic acids, wherein DuPont has yet to
withdraw its proposal to conduct unnecessary animal tests, including reproductive toxicity
tests.
For an interview with Nicole Cardello or a copy of PCRM's analyses of DuPont's proposed
test plans, please contact Jeanne Stuart McVey at 202-686-2210, ext. 316, or jeannem@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit
organization that promotes preventive medicine and higher standards in research. PCRM's
membership includes 5,000 physicians and more than 100,000 supporting members.
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