A general dose-response relationship for chronic chemical and other health stressors and mixtures based on an emergent illness severity model.

PLoS One

Veterinary Integrative Biosciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, United States of America.

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Current methods for evaluating human health responses to chemicals face challenges due to insufficient information about complex interactions at various biological levels.
  • A new dose-response function (DRF) is proposed that incorporates a comprehensive analysis of health stressors, highlighting the relationship between the dose causing illness and the severity of that illness, which can vary among individuals.
  • This DRF model is adaptable and preferable to traditional models when analyzing cancer and non-cancer data, showing how combined chemical exposure can alter expected responses, ultimately benefiting risk assessment and regulatory processes.

Article Abstract

Current efforts to assess human health response to chemicals based on high-throughput in vitro assay data on intra-cellular changes have been hindered for some illnesses by lack of information on higher-level extracellular, inter-organ, and organism-level interactions. However, a dose-response function (DRF), informed by various levels of information including apical health response, can represent a template for convergent top-down, bottom-up analysis. In this paper, a general DRF for chronic chemical and other health stressors and mixtures is derived based on a general first-order model previously derived and demonstrated for illness progression. The derivation accounts for essential autocorrelation among initiating event magnitudes along a toxicological mode of action, typical of complex processes in general, and reveals the inverse relationship between the minimum illness-inducing dose, and the illness severity per unit dose (both variable across a population). The resulting emergent DRF is theoretically scale-inclusive and amenable to low-dose extrapolation. The two-parameter single-toxicant version can be monotonic or sigmoidal, and is demonstrated preferable to traditional models (multistage, lognormal, generalized linear) for the published cancer and non-cancer datasets analyzed: chloroform (induced liver necrosis in female mice); bromate (induced dysplastic focia in male inbred rats); and 2-acetylaminofluorene (induced liver neoplasms and bladder carcinomas in 20,328 female mice). Common- and dissimilar-mode mixture models are demonstrated versus orthogonal data on toluene/benzene mixtures (mortality in Japanese medaka, Oryzias latipes, following embryonic exposure). Findings support previous empirical demonstration, and also reveal how a chemical with a typical monotonically-increasing DRF can display a J-shaped DRF when a second, antagonistic common-mode chemical is present. Overall, the general DRF derived here based on an autocorrelated first-order model appears to provide both a strong theoretical/biological basis for, as well as an accurate statistical description of, a diverse, albeit small, sample of observed dose-response data. The further generalizability of this conclusion can be tested in future analyses comparing with traditional modeling approaches across a broader range of datasets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6377108PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0211780PLOS

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