| Literature DB >> 24374802 |
Els Adriaens1, João Barroso, Chantra Eskes, Sebastian Hoffmann, Pauline McNamee, Nathalie Alépée, Sandrine Bessou-Touya, Ann De Smedt, Bart De Wever, Uwe Pfannenbecker, Magalie Tailhardat, Valérie Zuang.
Abstract
For more than two decades, scientists have been trying to replace the regulatory in vivo Draize eye test by in vitro methods, but so far only partial replacement has been achieved. In order to better understand the reasons for this, historical in vivo rabbit data were analysed in detail and resampled with the purpose of (1) revealing which of the in vivo endpoints are most important in driving United Nations Globally Harmonized System/European Union Regulation on Classification, Labelling and Packaging (UN GHS/EU CLP) classification for serious eye damage/eye irritation and (2) evaluating the method's within-test variability for proposing acceptable and justifiable target values of sensitivity and specificity for alternative methods and their combinations in testing strategies. Among the Cat 1 chemicals evaluated, 36-65 % (depending on the database) were classified based only on persistence of effects, with the remaining being classified mostly based on severe corneal effects. Iritis was found to rarely drive the classification (<4 % of both Cat 1 and Cat 2 chemicals). The two most important endpoints driving Cat 2 classification are conjunctiva redness (75-81 %) and corneal opacity (54-75 %). The resampling analyses demonstrated an overall probability of at least 11 % that chemicals classified as Cat 1 by the Draize eye test could be equally identified as Cat 2 and of about 12 % for Cat 2 chemicals to be equally identified as No Cat. On the other hand, the over-classification error for No Cat and Cat 2 was negligible (<1 %), which strongly suggests a high over-predictive power of the Draize eye test. Moreover, our analyses of the classification drivers suggest a critical revision of the UN GHS/EU CLP decision criteria for the classification of chemicals based on Draize eye test data, in particular Cat 1 based only on persistence of conjunctiva effects or corneal opacity scores of 4. In order to successfully replace the regulatory in vivo Draize eye test, it will be important to recognise these uncertainties and to have in vitro tools to address the most important in vivo endpoints identified in this paper.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24374802 PMCID: PMC3927066 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-013-1156-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Draize eye studies from various data sources
| Data source | Number of studies | UN GHS/EU CLP (proportion of valid studies) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Excludeda | Valid | No Cat | Cat 2 | Cat 1 | |
| RCD 1—ECETOC | 149 | 12 | 137 | 56.2 | 18.2 | 25.5 |
| RCD 2—ZEBET | 143 | 55 | 88 | 61.4 | 14.8 | 23.9 |
| RCD 3—LNS | 52 | 3 | 49 | 69.4 | 18.4 | 12.2 |
| RCD—Total | 344 | 70 | 274 | 60.2 | 17.2 | 22.6 |
| NCD—Total | 2,319 | 459 | 1,860 | 82.6 | 10.4 | 6.9 |
RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database
a(i) if study criteria allowing an unambiguous classification were not met (SCNM), (ii) if less than three animals were used and no severe and/or persistent effects were observed, (iii) in case of incomplete data or (iv) in case chemicals were classified in the absence of a classification triggering effect (i.e. not based on a second (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest animal mean tissue score above the classification threshold or on persistence of an effect) and the reason of classification was not indicated
Classification rules defined by UN GHS (UN 2013) and EU CLP (EC 2008)
| Endpoint | Range scoresa | Category 2b | Category 1c |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reversible effects on the eye/eye irritation | Irreversible effects on the eye/serious damage to eyes | ||
| CO | 0–4 | 1 ≤ COMaj < 3; and/or | COMaj ≥ 3; and/or |
| IR | 0–2 | 1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5; and/or | IRMaj > 1.5 |
| CR | 0–3 | CRMaj ≥ 2; and/or | |
| CC | 0–4 | CCMaj ≥ 2 |
COMaj, IRMaj, CRMaj, and CCMaj: correspond to the second highest (for studies with 3 or 4 animals) or the third highest (for studies with 5 or 6 animals) of the mean CO, IR, CR, and CC scores (of gradings at 24, 48, and 72 h). UN GHS criteria (UN 2013) and the ECHA Guidance on the application of the CLP criteria for classification of studies with more than three animals (ECHA, 2012; chapter 3.3.2.3.2.2 In vivo data) were applied (i.e. 2 out of 3, 3 out of 4, 3 out of 5, or 4 out of six animals with a mean score above a classification cut-off)
CO corneal opacity, IR iritis, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis
aMean scores are calculated from gradings at 24, 48, and 72 h after instillation of the test material and used to determine the classification of the chemical based on COMaj, IRMaj, CRMaj, and CCMaj
bAll effects have to fully reverse within an observation period of normally 21 days. UN GHS provides the option to distinguish this single hazard category into two optional subcategories (not implemented in EU CLP): “Category 2A” (irritant to eyes) when any of the eye effects in any animal is not fully reversible within 7 days of observation (i.e. CO, IR, CR and/or CC > 0 at 7 ≤ day < 21); “Category 2B” (mildly irritant to eyes) when all observed eye effects are fully reversible within 7 days of observation (i.e. CO, IR, CR and CC = 0 at day 7 and beyond)
cCat 1 also applies when CO = 4 or other severe reactions (e.g. destruction of cornea, discoloration of the cornea by a dye substance, adhesion, pannus, or interference with the function of the iris or other effects that impair sight) are observed at any time point in any rabbit during the observation period, and/or when effects that are not expected to reverse, or have not fully reversed within an observation period of normally 21 days (persistent effects) are observed (i.e. score > 0 on day 21 on any tissue in any animal)
Proportion of Cat 1 chemicals that were classified according to specific classification drivers
| Effects | Severity % ( | Persistence only % ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COMaj a ≥ 3 | CO = 4b (and COMaj a < 3) | IRMaj a > 1.5 only | CO | No CO | |
| RCD ( | 32.3 (20) | 29.0 (18) | 3.2 (2) | 25.8 (16) | 9.7 (6) |
| Reversible | 3.2 (2) | 1.6 (1) | 0.0 (0) | ||
| Persistent | 11.3 (7) | 14.5 (9) | 0.0 (0) | ||
| Unknown | 17.7 (11) | 12.9 (8) | 3.2 (2) | ||
| NCD ( | 24.0 (31) | 7.0 (9) | 3.9 (5) | 52.7 (68) | 12.4 (16) |
| Reversible | 0.8 (1) | 0.8 (1) | 0.0 (0) | ||
| Persistent | 8.5 (11) | 6.2 (8) | 2.3 (3) | ||
| Unknown | 14.7 (19) | 0.0 (0) | 1.6 (2) | ||
CO corneal opacity, IR iritis, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database
asecond (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean score
bObserved any time during the observation period (before day 21)
Proportion of Cat 2 chemicals that were classified according to specific classification drivers
| Effects | Severity % ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 ≤ COMaj a < 3 | CRMaj/CCMaj b ≥ 2 (and COMaj a < 1) | 1 ≤ IRMaj a ≤ 1.5 only | |
| RCD ( | 74.5 (35) | 25.5 (12) | 0.0 (0) |
| CRMaj + CCMaj | 36.2 (17) | 6.4 (3) | NA |
| CRMaj only | 21.3 (10) | 17.0 (8) | NA |
| CCMaj only | 6.4 (3) | 2.1 (1) | NA |
| COMaj only | 10.6 (5) | NA | NA |
| NCD ( | 54.1 (105) | 43.3 (84) | 2.6 (5) |
| CRMaj + CCMaj | 14.9 (29) | 7.2 (14) | NA |
| CRMaj only | 18.6 (36) | 34.0 (66) | NA |
| CCMaj only | 0.5 (1) | 2.1 (4) | NA |
| COMaj only | 20.1 (39) | NA | NA |
CO corneal opacity, IR iritis, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database, NA not applicable
asecond (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean score
bThe largest of the second (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean CR and CC scores
Distribution of the individual tissue scores on day 21 by endpoint for the chemicals from the RCD (ECETOC and ZEBET) that resulted in a persistent effect in at least one animal (n = 124 animals) a
| Endpoint | Tissue score (proportion of animals) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
| CO | 54.0 | 13.7 | 12.1 | 8.1 | 10.5 |
| IR | 82.3 | 8.1 | 8.1 | NA | NA |
| CR | 63.7 | 24.2 | 8.9 | 1.6 | NA |
| CC | 78.2 | 11.3 | 7.3 | 1.6 | 0.0 |
CO corneal opacity, IR iritis, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis, NA not applicable
aIndividual data for day 21 were only available for ECETOC and ZEBET databases. For 2 out of 124 animals, the study stopped before day 21 and the tissue score was not reversed to 0; these two animals were therefore not included in this table
Within-test variability of the mean CO scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h. Proportion of animals within each COMaj group
Proportions that fall in the light-grey area (No Cat range) correspond to animals with mean CO < 1 that were tested with chemicals with COMaj < 1; Proportions that fall in the grey area (Cat 2 range) correspond to animals with 1 ≤ mean CO < 3 that were tested with chemicals with 1 ≤ COMaj < 3; Proportions that fall in the dark-grey area (Cat 1 range) correspond to animals with mean CO ≥ 3 that were tested with chemicals with COMaj ≥ 3; Proportions in bold (diagonal) correspond to animals with mean CO scores equal to the COMaj of the chemicals tested in those animals
CO corneal opacity, NCD European New Chemicals Database, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases
Within-test variability of the mean IR scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h. Proportion of animals within each IRMaj group
Proportions that fall in the light-grey area (No Cat range) correspond to animals with mean IR < 1 that were tested with chemicals with IRMaj < 1; Proportions that fall in the grey area (Cat 2 range) correspond to animals with 1 ≤ mean IR ≤ 1.5 that were tested with chemicals with 1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5; Proportions that fall in the dark-grey area (Cat 1 range) correspond to animals with mean IR > 1.5 that were tested with chemicals with IRMaj > 1.5; Proportions in bold (diagonal) correspond to animals with mean CO scores equal to the IRMaj of the chemicals tested in those animals
IR iritis, NCD European New Chemicals Database, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases
Within-test variability of the mean CR scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h. Proportion of animals within each CRMaj group
Proportions that fall in the light-grey area (No Cat range) correspond to animals with mean CR < 2 that were tested with chemicals with CRMaj < 2; Proportions that fall in the grey area (Cat 2 range) correspond to animals with mean CR ≥ 2 that were tested with chemicals with CRMaj ≥ 2; Proportions in bold (diagonal) correspond to animals with mean CR scores equal to the CRMaj of the chemicals tested in those animals
CR conjunctiva redness, NCD European New Chemicals Database, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases
Within-test variability of the mean CC scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h. Proportion of animals within each CCMaj group
Proportions that fall in the light-grey area (No Cat range) correspond to animals with mean CC < 2 that were tested with chemicals with CCMaj < 2; Proportions that fall in the grey area (Cat 2 range) correspond to animals with mean CC ≥ 2 that were tested with chemicals with CCMaj ≥ 2; Proportions in bold (diagonal) correspond to animals with mean CC scores equal to the CCMaj of the chemicals tested in those animals
CC conjunctiva chemosis, NCD European New Chemicals Database, RCD Reference Chemicals Databases
Fig. 1Boxplots presenting the distribution of individual animal mean CO (a) and mean IR (b) scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h by classification driver. NCD: European New Chemicals Database, RCD: Reference Chemicals Databases, No Cat: not classified, Cat 2—1 ≤ COMaj < 3: classified based on majority of mean CO scores equal to or greater than 1 but less than 3, Cat 2—CRMaj/CCMaj ≥ 2 (and COMaj < 1): classified based on majority of mean CR and/or CC scores equal to or greater than 2 but with majority of mean CO scores less than 1, Cat 2—1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5 only: classified based on majority of mean IR scores equal to or greater than 1 but less than or equal to 1.5, Cat 1—COMaj ≥ 3: classified based on majority of mean CO scores equal to or greater than 3, Cat 1—CO = 4 (and COMaj < 3): classified based on CO = 4 but with majority of mean CO scores less than 3, Cat 1—IRMaj > 1.5 only: classified based on majority of mean IR scores greater than 1.5, Cat 1—Persistence only: classified based on persistence only. The whiskers correspond with the smallest and largest observation that fall within a distance of 1.5 times the length of the box (Interquartile Range, IQR) from the lower (bottom side of the box) and upper quartile (upper side of the box), respectively
Fig. 2Boxplots presenting the distribution of individual animal mean CR (a) and mean CC (b) scores calculated over the reading times at 24, 48, and 72 h by classification driver. NCD: European New Chemicals Database, RCD: Reference Chemicals Databases, No Cat: not classified, Cat 2—1 ≤ COMaj < 3: classified based on majority of mean CO scores equal to or greater than 1 but less than 3, Cat 2—CRMaj/CCMaj ≥ 2 (and COMaj < 1): classified based on majority of mean CR and/or CC scores equal to or greater than 2 but with majority of mean CO scores less than 1, Cat 2—1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5 only: classified based on majority of mean IR scores equal to or greater than 1 but less than or equal to 1.5, Cat 1—COMaj ≥ 3: classified based on majority of mean CO scores equal to or greater than 3, Cat 1—CO = 4 (and COMaj < 3): classified based on CO = 4 but with majority of mean CO scores less than 3, Cat 1—IRMaj > 1.5 only: classified based on majority of mean IR scores greater than 1.5, Cat 1—Persistence only: classified based on persistence only. The whiskers correspond with the smallest and largest observation that fall within a distance of 1.5 times the length of the box (Interquartile Range, IQR) from the lower (bottom side of the box) and upper quartile (upper side of the box), respectively
Resampling probabilities of 10,000 theoretical chemicals according to UN GHS/EU CLP criteria
| True class | Database | Endpoint | Sample size | Predicted class | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Cat | Cat 2 | Cat 1 | ||||
| No Cat | RCD | 606 |
| 0.1 | 0.0 | |
| NCD | 4,611 |
| 0.1 | 0.0 | ||
| Cat 2 | RCD | Alla | 162 | 3.9 |
| 0.6 |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 124 | 2.3 |
| 0.6 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 38 | 6.0 |
| NA | ||
| NCD | All | 582 | 11.7 |
| 0.1 | |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 315 | 5.0 |
| 0.2 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 252 | 9.7 |
| NA | ||
| 1 ≤ IRMaj b ≤ 1.5 only | 15 | 7.6 |
| 0.0 | ||
| Cat 1 | RCD | All | 187 | 0.0 | 10.8 |
|
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 43 | 0.0 | 1.7 |
| ||
| CO = 4d (and COMaj b < 3) | 61 | 0.0 | 13.0 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 7 | 0.0 | 14.2 |
| ||
| Persistence only | 76 | 0.1 | 13.5 |
| ||
| NCD | COMaj b ≥ 3 + IRMaj b > 1.5 onlye | 63 | 0.0 | 7.2 |
| |
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 48 | 0.0 | 1.9 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 15 | 0.0 | 8.2 |
| ||
Proportions in bold represent agreement between the predicted classification and the true classification
RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database, CO corneal opacity, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis, IR iritis, NA not applicable
aNone of the chemicals in this group was classified based on the driver 1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5 only
bsecond (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean score
cThe largest of the second (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean CR and CC scores
dObserved any time during the observation period (before day 21)
eIndividual animal data only accessible for the mean scores of days 1–3. Information on persistence of effects is only available in the form of comments, often not specifying in which tissues and in how many animals the persistence of effects was observed. Consequently, it was not possible to estimate the resampling probabilities for the chemicals that were classified based only on CO = 4 (observed any time during the observation period, before day 21) or persistence of a tissue effect. The resampling probabilities reported for the classification drivers COMaj ≥ 3 and IRMaj > 1.5 should therefore not be considered as representative of the overall resampling probabilities for chemicals classified as Cat 1 in the NCD
Resampling probabilities of 10,000 theoretical chemicals according to UN GHS/EU CLP criteria—liquids
| True class | Database | Endpoint | Sample size | Predicted class | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Cat | Cat 2 | Cat 1 | ||||
| No Cat | RCD | 399 |
| 0.1 | 0.0 | |
| NCD | 1,002 |
| 0.1 | 0.0 | ||
| Cat 2 | RCD | Alla | 123 | 3.2 |
| 0.6 |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 103 | 2.1 |
| 0.5 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 20 | 12.0 |
| NA | ||
| NCD | Alla | 156 | 9.8 |
| 0.0 | |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 99 | 3.5 |
| 0.0 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 57 | 11.9 |
| NA | ||
| Cat 1 | RCD | All | 94 | 0.0 | 15.3 |
|
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 25 | 0.0 | 1.4 |
| ||
| CO = 4d (and COMaj b < 3) | 22 | 0.0 | 12.1 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 4e | NA | NA | NA | ||
| Persistence only | 43 | 0.1 | 22.2 |
| ||
| NCD | COMaj b ≥ 3 + IRMaj b > 1.5 onlyf | 9 | 1.1 | 1.3 |
| |
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 6 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 3e | NA | NA | NA | ||
Proportions in bold represent agreement between the predicted classification and the true classification
RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database, CO corneal opacity, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis, IR iritis, NA not applicable
aNone of the chemicals in this group was classified based on the driver 1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5 only
bsecond (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean score
cThe largest of the second (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean CR and CC scores
dObserved any time during the observation period (before day 21)
eSample size is too small to perform a separate resampling analysis for this driver
fIndividual animal data only accessible for the mean scores of days 1–3. Information on persistence of effects is only available in the form of comments, often not specifying in which tissues and in how many animals the persistence of effects was observed. Consequently, it was not possible to estimate the resampling probabilities for the chemicals that were classified based only on CO = 4 (observed any time during the observation period, before day 21) or persistence of a tissue effect. The resampling probabilities reported for the classification drivers COMaj ≥ 3 and IRMaj > 1.5 should therefore not be considered as representative of the overall resampling probabilities for chemicals classified as Cat 1 in the NCD
Resampling probabilities of 10,000 theoretical chemicals according to UN GHS/EU CLP criteria—solids
| True class | Database | Endpoint | Sample size | Predicted class | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Cat | Cat 2 | Cat 1 | ||||
| No Cat | RCD | 152 |
| 0.0 | 0.00 | |
| NCD | 3,606 |
| 0.1 | 0.00 | ||
| Cat 2 | RCD | Alla | 33 | 5.0 |
| 0.0 |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 15 | 2.8 |
| 0.0 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 18 | 1.3 |
| NA | ||
| NCD | All | 426 | 12.7 |
| 0.0 | |
| 1 ≤ COMaj b < 3 | 216 | 5.6 |
| 0.1 | ||
| CRMaj/CCMaj c ≥ 2 (and COMaj b < 1) | 195 | 9.2 |
| NA | ||
| 1 ≤ IRMaj b ≤ 1.5 only | 15 | 7.6 |
| 0.0 | ||
| Cat 1 | RCD | All | 78 | 0.0 | 8.2 |
|
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 18 | 0.0 | 1.1 |
| ||
| CO = 4d (and COMaj b < 3) | 39 | 0.0 | 12.7 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 3e | NA | NA | NA | ||
| Persistence only | 18 | 0.0 | 10.4 |
| ||
| NCD | COMaj b ≥ 3 + IRMaj b > 1.5 onlyf | 54 | 0.0 | 6.7 |
| |
| COMaj b ≥ 3 | 42 | 0.0 | 3.1 |
| ||
| IRMaj b > 1.5 only | 12 | 0.0 | 4.7 |
| ||
Proportions in bold represent agreement between the predicted classification and the true classification
RCD Reference Chemicals Databases, NCD European New Chemicals Database, CO corneal opacity, CR conjunctiva redness, CC conjunctiva chemosis, IR iritis, NA not applicable
aNone of the chemicals in this group was classified based on the driver 1 ≤ IRMaj ≤ 1.5 only
bsecond (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean score
cThe largest of the second (n = 3 or 4) or third (n = 5 or 6) highest mean CR and CC scores
dObserved any time during the observation period (before day 21)
eSample size is too small to perform a separate resampling analysis for this driver
fIndividual animal data only accessible for the mean scores of days 1–3. Information on persistence of effects is only available in the form of comments, often not specifying in which tissues and in how many animals the persistence of effects was observed. Consequently, it was not possible to estimate the resampling probabilities for the chemicals that were classified based only on CO = 4 (observed any time during the observation period, before day 21) or persistence of a tissue effect. The resampling probabilities reported for the classification drivers COMaj ≥ 3 and IRMaj > 1.5 should therefore not be considered as representative of the overall resampling probabilities for chemicals classified as Cat 1 in the NCD