Plant protection products (PPPs) undergo rigorous safety assessments. In Europe, non-dietary risk assessments for operators, workers, bystanders and residents are highly conservative as this area of exposure science has historically been data poor. CropLife Europe (CLE) companies have collaborated to generate new data and pool existing data to refine the approaches prescribed by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) guidance on non-dietary exposure (2022).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegul Toxicol Pharmacol
August 2024
Historical control data (HCD) give context for a measurement by providing a biological reference frame. HCD are used in the evaluation of toxicological bioassays for quality and performance control, informal statistical false discovery rate mitigation, and to estimate the biological relevance of observed potentially adverse findings. The current commentary shortly highlights 5 points that should be considered when working with HCD of rare events: 1) HCD database (HCDB) size, 2) the issue of rare events, 3) potential chronological patterns, 4) using point estimates to summarize HCD and 5) independence from treatment bias, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs the United States and the European Union continue their steady march towards the acceptance of new approach methodologies (NAMs), we need to ensure that the available tools are fit for purpose. Critics will be well-positioned to caution against NAMs acceptance and adoption if the tools turn out to be inadequate. In this paper, we focus on Quantitative Structure Activity-Relationship (QSAR) models and highlight how the training database affects quality and performance of these models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the EU, predicted exposure to spray drift for residents and bystanders from applications in orchards and vineyards is based on data from one study published in 1987, where one downwind distance (8 m) was considered. CropLife Europe conducted sixteen new GLP compliant studies in 4 EU countries, 8 in orchards, 8 in vineyards with early and late season applications, using adult and child mannequins located 5, 10 and 15 m downwind from the last row to measure dermal and inhalation exposures. The resulting "Bystander Resident Orchard Vineyard (BROV)" database comprises 288 observations and offers a more comprehensive option for exposure prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ICH S1B carcinogenicity global testing guideline has been recently revised with a novel addendum that describes a comprehensive integrated Weight of Evidence (WoE) approach to determine the need for a 2-year rat carcinogenicity study. In the present work, experts from different organizations have joined efforts to standardize as much as possible a procedural framework for the integration of evidence associated with the different ICH S1B(R1) WoE criteria. The framework uses a pragmatic consensus procedure for carcinogenicity hazard assessment to facilitate transparent, consistent, and documented decision-making and it discusses best-practices both for the organization of studies and presentation of data in a format suitable for regulatory review.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew transfer coefficient (TC) values were derived for vineyard workers handling treated grapevines during harvesting and crop maintenance activities. Re-entry exposure and dislodgeable foliar residue (DFR) studies were performed in Europe, covering hand harvesting, pruning/training, pruning/tying and pruning/shoot lifting. Foliar applications of fungicides (iprovalicarb, dimethomorph, dithianon, pyrimethanil and fenbuconazole) were made and 73 workers at 16 sites were monitored over one working day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe increasing drive to understand the likelihood of skin sensitisation from plant protection products (PPPs) in workers and the general public has resulted in recent initiatives to establish a quantitative risk assessment (QRA) methodology applicable to these products and their exposure scenarios. The effective evaluation of skin sensitising substances requires not only the identification of that toxicological hazard, but also determination of relative sensitising potency. Typically, this has been achieved by interpretation of local lymph node assay (LLNA) dose response data, delivering what is known as the EC3 value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegul Toxicol Pharmacol
September 2023
In order to assess the regulatory value of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), authors should provide their opinion on the physiological and exposure relevance of observed in vitro effects for correlation with predicted in vivo effects. Further, peer-reviewers should be encouraged to request such information during review. This is critical to scientifically transition to animal-free, reliable, robust and -- most importantly -- relevant regulatory toxicology and risk assessment approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile there are some regulatory assessment criteria available on how to generally evaluate dermal absorption (DA) studies for risk assessment purposes, practical guidance and examples are lacking. The current manuscript highlights the challenges in interpretating data from in vitro assays and proposes holistic data-based assessment strategies from an industry perspective. Inflexible decision criteria may be inadequate for real data and may lead to irrelevant DA estimates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExposure to skin sensitizers is common and regulated in many industry sectors. For cosmetics, a risk-based approach has been implemented, focused on preventing the induction of sensitization. First, a No Expected Sensitization Induction Level (NESIL) is derived, then modified by Sensitization Assessment Factors (SAFs) to derive an Acceptable Exposure Level (AEL).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere are many challenges that must be overcome before in silico toxicity predictions are ripe for regulatory decision-making. Today, mandates in the United States of America and the European Union to avoid animal usage in toxicity testing is driving the need to consider alternative technologies, including Quantitative Structure Activity Relationship (QSAR) models, and read across approaches. However, when adopting new methods, it is critical that both new approach developers as well as regulatory users understand the strengths and challenges with these new approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is an identified need to revise the default air concentration values and assumptions applied in assessing vapour exposure in the risk assessment of bystanders and residents to plant protection products. To address this, we evaluated inhalation exposure via vapour using previously unpublished data from 29 field and wind tunnel studies. The database comprises 35 trials with 11 active ingredients covering a wide range of scenarios with respect to vapour pressure, crops, application rates and European regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStatistical analyses are an essential part of regulatory toxicological evaluations. While projects would be ideally monitored by both toxicologists and statisticians, this is often not possible in practice. Hence, toxicologists should be trained in some common statistical approaches but also need a tool for statistical evaluations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDermal absorption values are used to translate external dermal exposure into potential systemic exposure for non-dietary risk assessment of pesticides. While the Environmental Protection Agency of the United States of America (US EPA) derives a common dermal absorption factor for active substances covering all related products, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) requests specific product-based estimates for individual concentrations covering the intended use rates. The latter poses challenges, because it disconnects exposure dose from applied dose in absorption studies, which may not be suitable in scenarios where concentration is not relevant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dermal absorption potential of C-Caffeine applied as a 4 mg/mL concentration (10 μL/cm finite dose) was investigated in six laboratories under Good Laboratory Practice conditions using an OECD TG 428-compliant in vitro assay with flow-through cells and split-thickness human skin. Potential sources of variation were reduced by a standardized protocol, test item and skin source. Particularly, skin samples from same donors were distributed over two repeats and between labs in a non-random, stratified design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn current European non-dietary risk assessment for bystanders and residents, one of the plant protection product exposure pathways to be addressed is vapour inhalation. At present, active ingredients are grouped according to vapour pressure and assigned corresponding values. Risk assessments are driven by only two default air concentration values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor several authorities, benchmark dose (BMD) methodology has become the recommended approach by which to derive reference values for risk assessment. However, in practice, the BMD approach is not standard use in risk assessment for pesticides where the no observed adverse effect level, lowest observed adverse effect level and effective dose (ED or ED ) prevail. Regression-based BMD and the benchmark dose lower confidence limit (BMDL) have several advantages, such as utilizing more information from the generated data and being less dependent on tested dose levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegul Toxicol Pharmacol
October 2021
Historical control data (HCD) consist of pooled control group responses from bioassays. These data must be collected and are often used or reported in regulatory toxicology studies for multiple purposes: as quality assurance for the test system, to help identify toxicological effects and their effect-size relevance and to address the statistical multiple comparison problem. The current manuscript reviews the various classical and potential new approaches for using HCD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetribuzin is a herbicide that inhibits photosynthesis and has been used for over 40 years. Its main target organ is the liver and to some extent the kidney in rats, dogs, and rabbits. Metribuzin shows a specific thyroxine (T4) profile in rat studies with T4 increases at low doses and T4 decreases at higher doses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrently, the standard approach to estimate systemic exposure of workers after contact with dried pesticide residues on crops during re-entry activities relies on using the highest identified dermal absorption value for aqueous spray dilutions. However, recent dermal absorption studies with dried residues and their respective in-use dilutions have shown that this is likely to significantly overestimate their dermal penetration potential and, thus, predicted systemic exposure. The choice of appropriate dose levels for these dermal absorption studies has not been defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe propose benchmark dose estimation for event-time data, using a two-step approach. This approach avoids estimation of complex models and has been previously shown to give robust results for summarizing relevant parameters for risk assessment. In the first step, the probability of the event of interest to occur (in a certain time interval) is described as a function of time, resulting in an event-time model; such a model is fitted allowing an individual curve for each dose, and relevant estimates are extracted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is tempting to base (eco-)toxicological assay evaluation solely on statistical significance tests. The approach is stringent, objective and facilitates binary decisions. However, tests according to null hypothesis statistical testing (NHST) are thought experiments that rely heavily on assumptions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegul Toxicol Pharmacol
April 2021
We review the risk parameters and drivers in the current European Union (EU) worker risk assessment for pesticides, for example considering crop maintenance, crop inspection or harvesting activities, and show that the current approach is very conservative due to multiple worst-case default assumptions. As a case study, we compare generic exposure model estimates with measured worker re-entry exposure values which shows that external cumulative exposure is overpredicted by about 50-fold on average. For this exercise, data from 16 good laboratory practice (GLP)-compliant worker exposure studies in 6 crops were evaluated with a total number of 184 workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe benchmark dose (BMD) methodology is used to derive a hazard characterization measure for risk assessment in toxicology or ecotoxicology. The present paper's objective is to introduce the extension package which facilitates the estimation of BMD and the benchmark dose lower limit for a wide range of dose-response models via the popular package . It allows using the most current statistical methods for BMD estimation, including model averaging.
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