Physicians Committee (PCRM)
February 2016
Physicians Committee scientists have held the secretariat position of the International Council on Animal Protection in OECD Programmes since 2006. Through ICAPO, the Physicians Committee works together with the OECD and other groups to develop and promote the OECD’s AOP program to other scientists throughout the globe. Sullivan has led a team of international experts to develop an AOP that will pave the way for regulatory acceptance of nonanimal respiratory sensitization testing methods.
New Report Outlines Steps for AOP Development and Regulatory Acceptance
WASHINGTON—A new paper published in Regulatory Toxicology and
Pharmacology, co-authored by the Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine, calls for ongoing development and regulatory acceptance of adverse
outcome pathways (AOPs), a framework for improving chemical hazard
assessment by prioritizing modern test methods that reduce animal use.
The paper is a scientific report from a September 2014 workshop titled
Adverse Outcome Pathways: From Research to Regulation, which was
co-organized by Kristie Sullivan, M.P.H., Physicians Committee director of
regulatory testing. Sullivan also chaired a breakout group at the meeting
and co-authored the workshop report.
“The new catchphrase for cutting-edge chemical testing among toxicologists
is adverse outcome pathways,” says Sullivan. “Our goal is to educate health
professionals—from clinicians to chemists—about this groundbreaking chemical
hazard assessment tool to advance its development and use.”
An AOP is an organized collection of existing data on how exposure to a
particular chemical may trigger a series of biological changes in the body
resulting in illness or injury to an individual (human or animal) or
population.
Each AOP outlines a process that includes:
A single chemical may set several AOPs in motion, each ending with
different AO—depending on the dose or other factors, like the age or health
status of the organism. AOPs may also overlap with each other. This
complexity has the potential to better protect people, but also requires
building a network of scientific information.
Scientists can then use the AOP to identify specific KEs that are most
likely to lead to a particular AO. A chemical can then be tested for these
KEs. Defining which KEs to test for allows the scientists to choose the most
needed tests, which can increase testing speed, lower costs, and reduce
animal testing.
The three-day meeting, which was at the National Institutes of Health in
Bethesda, Md., and attended by 120 scientists and viewed remotely by 350
more participants, included a demonstration of the AOP Wiki and Effectopedia
and discussions on AOP case studies, AOPs in development, and the process of
regulatory acceptance.
AOPs are already gaining traction within the global scientific community.
The National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Advancing
Translational Sciences (NCATS) Tox21 program, which uses high throughput
screening (robotics), has provided AOP data by screening more than 10,000
chemicals for 60 different tests. NCATS is also developing an online
resource called BioPlanet, which is a collection of approximately 2000
human-relevant pathways. The Environmental Protection Agency is also using
data from its Toxicity Forecaster (ToxCastTM) robotic testing platform to
create AOPs.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which sets
chemical testing guidelines worldwide, is developing and recording a network
of AOPs using crowdsourced information technology tools including the AOP
Wiki and Effectopedia. Physicians Committee scientists have held the
secretariat position of the International Council on Animal Protection in
OECD Programmes since 2006. Through ICAPO, the Physicians Committee works
together with the OECD and other groups to develop and promote the OECD’s
AOP program to other scientists throughout the globe. Sullivan has led a
team of international experts to develop an AOP that will pave the way for
regulatory acceptance of nonanimal respiratory sensitization testing
methods.
The Physicians Committee and the Human Toxicology Project Consortium also
created an AOP Learning Channel on YouTube.
Other meeting presenters and report authors include experts from the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Integrated Laboratory
Systems Inc., the Environmental Protections Agency, the Food and Drug
Administration, the ILSI Health and Environmental Sciences Institute, the
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Dow Chemical Company, and the
European Commission.
The meeting concluded with recommendations for increased
collaboration—especially in fields outside of toxicology—and for working
groups to be established to prioritize and develop AOPs.
Sullivan will present “Introduction to Adverse Outcome Pathways and
International Activities Guiding AOP Development,” as part of a continuing
education program at the Society of Toxicology 55th Annual Meeting, March
13-17 in New Orleans.
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