| Literature DB >> 26930635 |
Howard M Solomon1, Susan L Makris2, Hasan Alsaid1, Oscar Bermudez3, Bruce K Beyer4, Antong Chen5, Connie L Chen3, Zhou Chen6, Gary Chmielewski7, Anthony M DeLise8, Luc de Schaepdrijver9, Belma Dogdas5, Julian French10, Wafa Harrouk6, Jonathan Helfgott11, R Mark Henkelman12, Jacob Hesterman13, Kok-Wah Hew14, Alan Hoberman15, Cecilia W Lo16, Andrew McDougal6, Daniel R Minck6, Lelia Scott15, Jane Stewart17, Vicki Sutherland18, Arun K Tatiparthi7, Christopher T Winkelmann19, L David Wise20, Sandra L Wood21, Xiaoyou Ying22.
Abstract
During the past two decades the use and refinements of imaging modalities have markedly increased making it possible to image embryos and fetuses used in pivotal nonclinical studies submitted to regulatory agencies. Implementing these technologies into the Good Laboratory Practice environment requires rigorous testing, validation, and documentation to ensure the reproducibility of data. A workshop on current practices and regulatory requirements was held with the goal of defining minimal criteria for the proper implementation of these technologies and subsequent submission to regulatory agencies. Micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) is especially well suited for high-throughput evaluations, and is gaining popularity to evaluate fetal skeletons to assess the potential developmental toxicity of test agents. This workshop was convened to help scientists in the developmental toxicology field understand and apply micro-CT technology to nonclinical toxicology studies and facilitate the regulatory acceptance of imaging data. Presentations and workshop discussions covered: (1) principles of micro-CT fetal imaging; (2) concordance of findings with conventional skeletal evaluations; and (3) regulatory requirements for validating the system. Establishing these requirements for micro-CT examination can provide a path forward for laboratories considering implementing this technology and provide regulatory agencies with a basis to consider the acceptability of data generated via this technology. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Concordance criteria; Developmental toxicology; GLP validation; Imaging; Micro-CT; Skeletal evaluation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26930635 DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2016.02.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Regul Toxicol Pharmacol ISSN: 0273-2300 Impact factor: 3.271