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Relevance and Follow-up of Positive Results in In Vitro Genetic Toxicity Testing

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      ®   MISSION

®   BACKGROUND

®   OBJECTIVES

®   ACCOMPLISHMENTS

®   FUTURE ACTIVITIES

®   ANTICIPATED IMPACT

®   PROJECT COMMITTEE PARTICIPANTS

®   LEADERSHIP AND INFORMATION

 

MISSION

The mission of this Project Committee is to improve the scientific basis of the interpretation of results from in vitro genetic toxicology tests for purposes of more accurate human risk assessment; to develop follow-up strategies for determining the relevance of in vitro test results to human health; and to provide a framework for integration of in vitro testing results into a risk-based assessment of the effects of chemical exposures on human health.

 

BACKGROUND

The rate of positive compounds in in vitro genetic toxicology tests is known to be high, especially in the in vitro chromosome damage tests (e.g., 25% of approved drugs in the Physician’s Desk Reference were positive in this test).  Further, the rate of false positives for noncarcinogens in in vitro genotoxicity assays has been shown to be extremely high.  Because it is generally considered that data obtained in vitro is a demonstration of the intrinsic genotoxic properties of the test compounds, other data, such as negative results from in vivo tests, are needed to help determine the biological significance of the in vitro positive result. 

 

It is recognized that some compounds are genotoxic via indirect mechanisms, e.g., impairment of the mitotic spindle, impairment of protein and DNA synthesis, nucleotide mis-incorporation, etc.  For these compounds, the possibility of establishing a safe level, threshold exists.

 

Finally, while the relevance of in vitro positive results obtained under extreme experimental conditions (e.g., severe cytotoxicity, high concentrations of the test material) is often debated, threshold and weight-of-evidence approaches are currently not well-accepted by the regulatory authorities for DNA-reactive compounds.

 

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OBJECTIVES

The objectives of the IVGT Project Committee are to:

 

n        Survey public and proprietary in vitro and in vivo dose-response data in order to evaluate the relationship of positive genotoxicity results to cytotoxicity, and the relationship between in vitro and in vivo data, with a focus on cytogenetics.

 

n       Compile information from companies and institutes on mechanisms of genotoxic actions to help define approaches for establishing effects that have low human risk by virtue of the presence of a threshold. 

 

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ACCOMPLISHMENTS

n        The HESI membership and key stakeholders recognized the impact of positive results from in vitro genetic toxicity tests as a mutually important issue at the January 2005 Annual Meeting.  This topic was selected to become a component of the HESI scientific portfolio as part of the Emerging Issues Process.

n        The IVGT Subcommittee identified its leadership in early 2005, including a multi-sector, international steering team with representatives from the U.S., Europe and Japan, and has established liaisons with relevant activities already underway both within HESI (e.g., the Genomics Technical Committee, the Cancer Hazard Identification Strategies (CHIS) Project Committee, and the Biological Significance of DNA Adducts Project Committee) and outside of HESI (e.g., most notably, the International Workshop on Genotoxicity Testing, or IWGT).

n        The IVGT Subcommittee steering team submitted an abstract for the Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Toxicology in Nagoya in July, 2006.

n        The IVGT Subcommittee held an international workshop June 21-22, 2006 in Washington, DC that focused on appropriate interpretation of in vitro test results and suitable follow-up testing strategies for assessment of in vivo risk of somatic cell genetic damage and cancer induction.

n        The IVGT Subcommittee published the June 2006 workshop proceedings in Mutation Research

n        The IVGT Subcommittee held an international workshop on June 5-6, 2007 in Washington DC to discuss potential HESI workgroup projects and follow-up from the June 2006 meeting

  

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FUTURE ACTIVITIES

The steering team is working to work several subcommittee workgroups as a follow-up to the June 2007 meeting, expand committee membership, and move forward.  Representatives from the committee will present at the upcoming 2007 US Environmental Mutagen Society Annual Meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, and the 2007 Eurotox Meeting in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. 

 

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ANTICIPATED IMPACT

This activity will make full use of HESI’s commitment to the ‘tripartite’ approach involving recognized experts from industry, academic laboratories and regulatory authorities, which will carry authoritative weight and may lead to new policies.  This Project Committee will work to provide a framework for the integration of in vitro testing results into a risk-based assessment of the effects of chemical exposures on human health.  The approaches taken could lead to the application of new techniques (e.g. for the measurement of cytotoxicity, avoidance of cellular overload), or to modifications in risk assessment (e.g. weight of evidence and threshold concept vs. qualitative decision-making), and will be of relevance to a multi-sector, international audience, including those in the chemical, pharmaceutical, agricultural chemical, and consumer-products industries.  The successful realization of this activity will advance the scientific basis for the interpretation of positive results in in vitro genetic toxicity tests, and will facilitate the development of follow-up testing strategies and criteria for determining the relevance of findings to human health.   

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PROJECT COMMITTEE PARTICIPANTS

Public Participation

 

BfArM, Germany

Covance Laboratories

European Food Safety Authority

Health Canada

Huntington Life Sciences

Lexicon Genetics

Michigan State University

National Center for Toxicological Research,

   U.S. FDA

National Institute of Health Sciences, Japan

RIVM, The Netherlands

Toxicology Consulting Services

U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

U.S. Food and Drug Administration     

 

 

Member Participation

 

Amgen, Inc.

AstraZeneca

BASF Corporation

Bayer HealthCare AG

Bristol-Myers Squibb

Coca Cola Company

Dow Chemical/Dow AgroSciences

GlaxoSmithKline

Institut de Recherches Internationales

    SERVIER

Johnson & Johnson

L’Oreal

Merck Research Laboratories

N.V. Organon

Novartis Pharma AG

Pfizer Inc

The Procter & Gamble Company

Purdue Pharma

sanofi-aventis

Schering-Plough Research Institute

 

 

 

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LEADERSHIP AND INFORMATION

Chair……………………………........ Dr. Veronique Thybaud

                                     

Vice-chair……………………......... Dr. B. Bhaskar Gollapudi

                                   

Scientific advisors…….........….Dr. Daniel Casciano

                                             Dr. James MacGregor

                                   

HESI Staff……………….........…...Dr. James Kim

                                             Mr. Eric Moore

 

For more information, please contact: Dr. Michelle Embry, HESI Scientific Program Manager, at 202-659-3306 or jkim@hesiglobal.org.


For more information on the IVGT Subcommittee’s leadership and membership, and activities, click here.


Click here to download the English in vitro Genetic Toxicity (IVGT) Testing Project Committee fact sheet.