Cargando…

Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.

Most of the many published guidelines on how to conduct mutagenicity tests do not give advice or references on statistical analysis of data. The U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society decided to address this omission, and in 1985 established 8 working groups comprising genetic toxicologists from all sec...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Kirkland, D J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1994
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8187723
_version_ 1782129713601314816
author Kirkland, D J
author_facet Kirkland, D J
author_sort Kirkland, D J
collection PubMed
description Most of the many published guidelines on how to conduct mutagenicity tests do not give advice or references on statistical analysis of data. The U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society decided to address this omission, and in 1985 established 8 working groups comprising genetic toxicologists from all sectors of the science, plus at least 2 statisticians per group, to produce statistics guidelines on 10 different test systems. Each group gave advice on how to determine the suitability of data for distribution fitting, when data are unsuitable, when and how data should be transformed, which statistical tests are suitable for a given set of data, which factors govern the choice of statistical test, an order of preference, and some worked examples using real data. In addition, groups gave advice on statistical issues in the design of experiments. Strong recommendations were made that for in vitro tests, sufficient cells be treated and sampled to provide meaningful values of spontaneous mutant/aberration frequencies, for genuine, independent replicate treatments to be used, and that the acceptability of an experiment should be based on homogeneity between replicates as well as comparison of negative and positive control responses with historical ranges. It was recommended that most in vitro studies should include independent repeat experiments, and advice was given on how to check for consistency between experiments and then combine data for further significance testing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
format Text
id pubmed-1566888
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1994
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-15668882006-09-19 Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society. Kirkland, D J Environ Health Perspect Research Article Most of the many published guidelines on how to conduct mutagenicity tests do not give advice or references on statistical analysis of data. The U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society decided to address this omission, and in 1985 established 8 working groups comprising genetic toxicologists from all sectors of the science, plus at least 2 statisticians per group, to produce statistics guidelines on 10 different test systems. Each group gave advice on how to determine the suitability of data for distribution fitting, when data are unsuitable, when and how data should be transformed, which statistical tests are suitable for a given set of data, which factors govern the choice of statistical test, an order of preference, and some worked examples using real data. In addition, groups gave advice on statistical issues in the design of experiments. Strong recommendations were made that for in vitro tests, sufficient cells be treated and sampled to provide meaningful values of spontaneous mutant/aberration frequencies, for genuine, independent replicate treatments to be used, and that the acceptability of an experiment should be based on homogeneity between replicates as well as comparison of negative and positive control responses with historical ranges. It was recommended that most in vitro studies should include independent repeat experiments, and advice was given on how to check for consistency between experiments and then combine data for further significance testing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 1994-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1566888/ /pubmed/8187723 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Kirkland, D J
Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title_full Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title_fullStr Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title_full_unstemmed Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title_short Statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the U.K. Environmental Mutagen Society.
title_sort statistical evaluation of mutagenicity test data: recommendations of the u.k. environmental mutagen society.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8187723
work_keys_str_mv AT kirklanddj statisticalevaluationofmutagenicitytestdatarecommendationsoftheukenvironmentalmutagensociety