학술논문

The Borderline Range of Toxicological Methods: Quantification and Implications for Evaluating Precision
Document Type
Report
Source
ALTEX: Alternatives to Animal Experimentation. Fall 2017, Vol. 34 Issue 4, p525, 14 p.
Subject
Toxicity testing -- Methods
Skin tests -- Methods
Science and technology
Zoology and wildlife conservation
Methods
Language
English
ISSN
1868-596X
Abstract
Test methods to assess the skin sensitization potential of a substance usually use threshold criteria to dichotomize continuous experimental read-outs into yes/no conclusions. The threshold criteria are prescribed in the respective OECD test guidelines and the conclusion is used for regulatory hazard assessment, i.e., classification and labelling of the substance. We can identify a borderline range (BR) around the classification threshold within which test results are inconclusive due to a test method's biological and technical variability. We quantified BRs in the prediction models of the non-animal test methods DPRA, LuSens and h-CLAT, and of the animal test LLNA, respectively. Depending on the size of the BR, we found that between 6% and 28% of the substances in the sets tested with these methods were considered borderline. When the results of individual non-animal test methods were combined into integrated testing strategies (ITS), borderline test results of individual tests also affected the overall assessment of the skin sensitization potential of the testing strategy. This was analyzed for the 2-out-of-3 ITS: Four out of 40 substances (10%) were considered borderline. Based on our findings we propose expanding the standard binary classification of substances into "positive"/"negative" or "hazardous"/"non-hazardous" by adding a "borderline" or "inconclusive" alert for cases where test results fall within the borderline range. Keywords: non-animal methods, variability, borderline range, skin sensitization
1 Introduction Skin sensitizers are substances that can lead to an allergic response following skin contact (UNECE, 2011). An individual may be sensitized upon first contact. Subsequent contact can then [...]