| Literature DB >> 19690994 |
Elizabeth Julien1, Alan R Boobis, Stephen S Olin.
Abstract
The ILSI Research Foundation convened a cross-disciplinary working group to examine current approaches for assessing dose-response and identifying safe levels of intake or exposure for four categories of bioactive agents-food allergens, nutrients, pathogenic microorganisms, and environmental chemicals. This effort generated a common analytical framework-the Key Events Dose-Response Framework (KEDRF)-for systematically examining key events that occur between the initial dose of a bioactive agent and the effect of concern. Individual key events are considered with regard to factors that influence the dose-response relationship and factors that underlie variability in that relationship. This approach illuminates the connection between the processes occurring at the level of fundamental biology and the outcomes observed at the individual and population levels. Thus, it promotes an evidence-based approach for using mechanistic data to reduce reliance on default assumptions, to quantify variability, and to better characterize biological thresholds. This paper provides an overview of the KEDRF and introduces a series of four companion papers that illustrate initial application of the approach to a range of bioactive agents.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19690994 PMCID: PMC2840877 DOI: 10.1080/10408390903110692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr ISSN: 1040-8398 Impact factor: 11.176
ILSI RF Threshold Working Group
*Threshold Project Steering Committee Member.
†Currently, Scientific Consultant, Rockville, MD, USA.
Figure 1.Factors operating at the level of Key Events. In addition to dose, other factors may influence the outcome of an individual event. In combination, they may affect the likelihood of progression to the next event, or they may affect the magnitude of the ultimate response of concern.
Figure 2.The Key Events Dose-Response Framework organizes available information on the multiple kinetic and dynamic events that occur between an initial dose and the effect of concern. Events are indicated generically here; but, for a given pathway, many specific kinetic and dynamic events may occur.
Some authoritative definitions of “threshold”
| Authoritative Source | Definition of “Threshold” |
| International Programme on Chemical Safety (IPCS) Risk Assessment Terminology. | |
| USEPA IRIS Glossary. | |
| USEPA Terms of Environment: Glossary, Abbreviations and Acronyms. | Two definitions are provided: |