In terms of packing I'd possibly use multiple layers hardboard and thin plywood - but the way I do it requires access to a laser level, be cause you fundamentally need to build a series of contours starting at the lowest level and getting larger (sort of like the way a hill is shown on an Ordnance Survey map, only inverted. The difficulty with chipboard is that it is rigid and won't readily conform to the floor beneath - but it is also brittle, meaning that if it isn't adequately supported, it will crack and/or sag over time. It will also lift your floor by 18mm, meaning that the door(s) will need to come off and be trimmed
If you have been given full sheets it might be less painful to lift the floorboards, level the floor by adding straight timber to the sides of the old joists (a process called sistering), and then fixing the chipboard to the tops of the sistered joists. That way you get a perfectly level, properly supported floor, but you don't need to cut your door(s) down