Publication | Closed Access
The Ames<i>Salmonella</i>/Microsome Mutagenicity Assay: Issues of Inference and Validation
58
Citations
28
References
1989
Year
Pathogen DetectionMolecular EpidemiologyGenetic EpidemiologyLocal SingularitiesToxicology TestingDrug ResistanceToxicologyBiostatisticsInfection ControlMolecular DiagnosticsAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesPredictive ToxicologyClinical MicrobiologyToxicogenomicsEpidemiologyPathogenesisForensic ToxicologyInduced MutationMicrobiologyAmes Test DataMedicineMutagenesis
Abstract The importance of chemically induced mutation for human health is discussed briefly, and the biological basis for the primary in vitro assay for mutagenicity, the Ames Salmonella/microsome assay, is reviewed. A previous analysis for Ames test data, based on two mathematical models of the competing risks of mutation and toxicity, is shown to have inflated false-positive rates. A reason for this is the existence of local singularities in the Fisher information matrix. A new likelihood ratio test incorporating a pretest of a nuisance parameter is proposed, and its size is validated with replicated experimental data through an analysis based on a finite-mixture-of-binomials model.
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