| Literature DB >> 29934904 |
Supratik Kar1, Kunal Roy2, Jerzy Leszczynski1.
Abstract
An extensive use of pharmaceuticals and the widespread practices of their erroneous disposal measures have made these products contaminants of emerging concern (CEC). Especially, active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are ubiquitously detected in surface water and soil, mainly in the aquatic compartment, where they do affect the living systems. Unfortunately, there is a huge gap in the availability of ecotoxicological data on pharmaceuticals' environmental behavior and ecotoxicity which force EMEA (European Medicines Agency) to release guidelines for their risk assessment. In silico modeling approaches are vital tools to exploit the existing information to rapidly emphasize the potentially most hazardous and toxic pharmaceuticals and prioritize the most environmentally hazardous ones for focusing further on their experimental studies. The quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models are capable of predicting missing properties for toxic end-points required to prioritize existing, or newly synthesized chemicals for their potential hazard. This chapter reviews the information regarding occurrence and impact of pharmaceuticals and their metabolites in the environment along with their persistence, environmental fate, risk assessment, and risk management. A bird's eye view about the necessity of in silico methods for fate prediction of pharmaceuticals in the environment as well as existing successful models regarding ecotoxicity of pharmaceuticals are discussed. Available toxicity endpoints, ecotoxicity databases, and expert systems frequently used for ecotoxicity predictions of pharmaceuticals are also reported. The overall discussion justifies the requirement to build up additional in silico models for quick prediction of ecotoxicity of pharmaceuticals economically, without or involving only limited animal testing.Entities:
Keywords: APIs; CEC; Ecotoxicity; In silico; Pharmaceuticals; QSAR; Risk assessment; Risk management; Waste management
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29934904 PMCID: PMC7120680 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-7899-1_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Mol Biol ISSN: 1064-3745
Fig. 1Sources, routes and fate of pharmaceuticals in different compartments of environment
Fig. 2Types of pharmaceutical hazardous wastes with few examples [Color of the boxes for the medical waste represents the color of the waste container]
Fig. 3Different ways of treatment for medical wastes to avoid high risk of ecotoxicity
Fig. 4Reasons for ecotoxicity study along with steps for risk assessment and risk management due to pharmaceuticals hazards
Roles of different stakeholders to reduce the pharmaceutical induces ecotoxicity
| Stakeholders | Possible measures, roles and action |
|---|---|
| Doctors | • Prescribed only required medicine. • Awareness about their hazardous properties. |
| Pharmacist | • Awareness and information about usage and disposal to patients. • Take back system of unused medicine if possible. |
| Patients | • Improvement of compliance and proper disposal. • Consumption of medicine only if prescribed by a doctor. |
| Hospitals | • Amalgamation of the delivering pharmacy/wholesaler about the handling of expired medicaments. • Proper implementation of rules and regulation by hospital authorities for the disposal of pharmaceuticals and other medicaments. |
| Industries | • Periodical report of environmental assessment related data of individual pharmaceuticals along with raw materials, in process ingredients. • Complete information about analytical methods and results. • Proper packaging and labeling with proper uses, storage and disposal. • Improved drug delivery systems so that smaller doses are needed. • Environment friendly packaging with extended shelf life of packing material. |
| Drinking water | • Extended monitoring of water for hospital, industry and pathological centers. • Advanced treatment of water • Suitable approach to complete or up to acceptable limit removal of waste. |
| Waste water treatment | • Tertiary treatment methods such as ozonation, activated carbon adsorption, or nanofiltration. • Separate and careful piping between waste water and rain water. |
| Authorities | • Instigation and back up of communication between all stakeholders. • Implementation of threshold limits for each pharmaceuticals and other medicaments for different environmental compartments. |
| Policies and regulations | • Annexation of every APIs and formulation product in environmental legislation. • Updated regulation for the management of out dated and new as well as existing medicaments. |
| Green pharmacy | • Fast and trouble free degradability of pharmaceutical products and supplements. • Improvement of synthesis and renewable feedstock for preparation of environment friendly pharmaceuticals. |
A list of endpoints for modeling purpose under OECD and areas where QSAR models can be employed
| Endpoints for modeling under OECD | Areas where QSAR models can be used |
|---|---|
• • • ▪ | • Prioritization of existing pharmaceuticals for toxicity to environment • Classification and labeling of new pharmaceuticals • Risk assessment of new and existing pharmaceuticals • Guiding experimental design of regulatory tests or testing strategies • Providing mechanistic information • Filling up the large data gaps • Building a proper database of each pharmaceutical to different species regarding ecotoxicity • Development of expert systems for each therapeutic class for diverse compartments of the environment • Construction of efficient interspecies models to extrapolate data from one species to another species when data of a specific species is missing |
Global regulatory agencies which deal with the environmental risk assessment and risk management of pharmaceuticals
| Regulatory agencies | Objective | Responsibility and method of risk assessment |
|---|---|---|
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| Advises clients on the environmental hazards and potential risks associated with the production, use and disposal of chemicals. AEA is a member of the Society of Ecotoxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) | AEA has undertaken reports for the Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities (DSEWPaC), particularly with respect to their environmental assessments performed on new and existing agricultural and veterinary chemicals for the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicine Authority (APVMA), and industrial chemicals for the National Industrial Chemicals Notification and Assessment Scheme (NICNAS). |
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| CDER reviews New Drug Applications to ensure that the drugs are safe and effective. Its primary objective is to ensure that all prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medications are safe and effective when used as directed. | An assessment of risk to the environment is required for manufacture, use and distribution of human drugs under the National Environment Policy Act of 1969 and an environmental assessment procedure was developed by the US Food and Drug Administration (US FDA) as a part of the registration procedure for new human pharmaceutical drugs. Additionally, in 1995, the FDA-CDER issued a new guidance for the Submission of an Environmental Assessment in Human drugs. In 1997 the FDA implemented a Note for Guidance paper in which all drugs entering the aquatic compartment at levels below 1 μg/L Predicted Environmental Concentration (PECEFFLUENT) were exempted from a detailed risk assessment. |
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| EMEA exhibits the scope and legal basis for risk assessment of pharmaceuticals and outlines the general considerations and the recommended stepwise procedure for their risk assessment. The guideline considers the specific features of pharmaceuticals, e.g., the use of available pharmacological information. Previously environmental risk assessments performed mainly on acute ecotoxicity data, but in recent time EMEA draft has proposed to include pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data for environmental risk assessment. | Environmental risk assessment is divided into three phases: (a) Phase I: (b) Phase II Tier A: (c) Phase II Tier B: |
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| The CSTEE has identified the need for a proactive approach in obtaining data on the environmental effects of pharmaceuticals. Thus, it is recognized that a prioritization procedure needs to be developed for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals, and that this should follow the general scheme for chemicals described in the White Paper for future EU chemicals policy i.e., REACH guideline. | QSAR is the first step in gaining more general knowledge on the risk assessment issue as an alternative to nonanimal method. In contrast to the amount of analytical data, information about the ecotoxicological effects of drug residues is scrubby. To create a broader basis for the evaluation of the ecotoxicological relevance of pharmaceutical compounds, proper documentation of their effects and the reason are identified and documented. |
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| The MHLW constructed a research group to build up a concept on the regulation of pharmaceuticals for environmental safety in 2007. The regulation system is similar to that of general chemicals in Japan and the Guideline by EMEA. The main function of this group is to establish a risk-benefit analysis committee for the pharmaceuticals which have a high risk for environmental organisms and to human health. | The risk assessment is judged by the PEC/PNEC (Predicted Environmental Concentration/Predicted No Effect Concentration) ratio or ΣPECi/PNECi. In addition, the Organization for Pharmaceutical Safety and Research (OPSR) conducted compliance reviews on application data. This was followed by the integration of the aforementioned Evaluation Center, OPSR, and part of the Medical Devices Center to form a new independent administrative organization, the Pharmaceutical and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA). The MHLW and PMDA handle a wide range of activities from clinical studies to approval reviews, reviews throughout post-marketing stage, and pharmaceutical safety measures. |
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| NICNAS was established in July 1990 under the | The major responsibility of NICNAS are: • Assessing new industrial chemicals for human health and/or environmental effects • Maintaining the Australian Inventory of Chemical Substances (AICS) • Circulation of information on the human health and environmental impacts of chemicals and recommending on their safe use • Registering new industrial chemicals |
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| Aims to improve the protection of human health and the environment through the better and earlier identification of the intrinsic properties of chemical substances. | “No data no market”: the REACH Regulation places responsibility on industry to manage the risks from chemicals and to provide safety information on the substances. Manufacturers and importers of substances have a general obligation to submit a registration to the European Chemicals Agency for each substance manufactured or imported in quantities of 1 tonne or more per year per company |
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| An authorized regulatory body which was initiated in 2005 by the Swedish Association for the Pharmaceutical Industry. The rationale of the classification system is to offer the public and health care sectors with environmental information about all active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) on the Swedish market up to now. | To improve risk management decision making, sufficient knowledge about environmental exposures and effects in nontarget species for all relevant pharmaceutical substances is needed. Within SECIS, the pharmaceutical companies provide environmental data and classify their products according to predefined criteria and a guidance document. The guidance document is developed for the purposes of SECIS, but it is based on the European Medicines Agency (EMA) guideline for environmental risk assessment of pharmaceuticals and the European Commission Technical Guidance Document (TGD). |
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| The German Medicines Act provides that the UBA is responsible for the environmental risk assessment. The UBA started assessing the environmental impact of veterinary and human pharmaceuticals in an authorization routine in 1998 and 2003, respectively. | The UBA already assessed around 180 veterinary and around 240 human pharmaceutical formulations. Filtering concepts established between UBA and the authorization agency responsible for veterinary medicines focused the ERA on antibiotics, parasiticidal substances and analgesics. Cytostatic medicines, hormones and contrast agents dominated the human medicine dossiers assessed by UBA. |
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| VICH is a trilateral (EU–Japan–USA) program aimed at harmonizing technical requirements for veterinary product registration was officially launched in April 1996. The initiative to begin the harmonization process came about in 1983 when the first International Technical Consultation on Veterinary Drug Registration (ITCVDR) was held. | Veterinary medicinal products (VMPs) are regulated for environment safety as described in Environmental Impact Assessment for VMPs; Phase I in 2000 and Phase II in 2004. |
Fig. 5Areas of risk assessment and modeling for ecotoxicity prediction as stated to the OECD
Fig. 6Category of information included in predicting health and environmental effects according to the OECD guidelines
Fig. 7Most common in silico tools for the prediction of pharmaceuticals ecotoxicity
Fig. 8The need of in silico modeling assessing the impact of pharmaceuticals ecotoxicity
Toxicity endpoints for the modeling of pharmaceuticals ecotoxicity
| Endpoints | Species | Depiction | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Algae |
| Unicellular fresh-water green microalgae comprises a major part of phytoplankton | Study the toxic action of organic compounds |
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| One of the prime producers of the aquatic ecosystem and ideal test organisms for toxicological studies. | Ecotoxicity is measured by growth rate inhibition of green algae | |
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| Common cosmopolitan green algae, often occurring as almost a pure culture in fresh water plankton. | Ability to grow in industrial wastewaters of different origins showing good adaptation ability and versatile microalgae as toxicity test endpoint | |
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| Green algae of the Chlorophyceae. Colonial and nonmotile in nature. | Employed in the prediction of photoinduced toxicity of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and ionic liquids (ILs) | |
| Bacterium |
| A Gram-negative, facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium of the genus |
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| Gram-negative rod-shaped bacterium having bioluminescent properties and found predominantly in symbiosis with various marine animals | Employed in the research of microbial bioluminescence, quorum sensing along with ecotoxicity testing for diverse range of organic chemicals and pharmaceuticals | |
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| A genus of gram-positive, rod-shaped bacteria and member of the phylum Firmicutes | Chlorophenol toxicity is tested on bacillus species. | |
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| Can be employed for modeling of antibiotics toxicity and resistance studies | |
| Crustaceans |
| Small planktonic crustacean and one of the small aquatic crustaceans commonly called water fleas. Most commonly employed species is | Invertebrate species in aquatic food webs has been used as a representative test species for ecotoxicological evaluation of diverse organic chemicals using immobilization test |
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| A family of crustaceans with wide distribution including Western Australia and Southern Africa. | 24 h toxicity test employed for screening of pure compounds, effluents, sediments, surface and ground waters, wastewaters, and biotoxins | |
| Duckweed |
| One form of aquatic vascular plant (duckweed) known as thallus, which floats on the surface of the water. | Used in modeling of phytotoxicity of ILs and growth inhibition test of duckweeds |
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| Used in testing the phytotoxicity of pesticides and other environmental chemicals to higher plants. | ||
| Enzyme | Acetylcholinesterase | Catalyzes the hydrolysis of acetylcholinesters with a relative specificity for acetylcholine in autonomic nervous system function. | Enzyme inhibition data of the acetylcholinesterase from |
| Fish | Channel Catfish Ovary (CCO) | CCO is the cell line of choice for the propagation and diagnosis of Channel Catfish Virus (CCV). | Standard for diagnosing Channel Catfish Virus Disease (CCVD) in farm reared Channel Catfish. Prediction of ILs has also been performed |
| Zebrafish | A tropical freshwater fish belonging to the family Cyprinidae | Standardized under the OECD and employed to test chemicals and pharmaceuticals | |
| Fathead minnow |
| Studied to examine the effects of waste materials on the aquatic life. Effects induced by progestins are largely studied employing fathead minnow. | |
| Mammalian cells | Human keratinocyte cell line (HaCaT) | HaCaT cells are a spontaneously immortalized, human keratinocyte line. | Used for studies of skin biology and cytotoxicity assessment of metal oxide |
| CaCo-2 | Heterogeneous human epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma cells. | Permeability coefficients across the cellular membranes of Caco-2 cells are generally employed for modeling | |
| HeLa | A prototypical cells of the human epithelium used in scientific research. | Derived from cervical cancer cells and largely employed for anticancer activity | |
| Prostate cancer cell line (PC3) | A human prostate cancer cell lines | Used in modeling of prostate cancer inhibitors | |
| Human malignant melanoma (Fem-X) | Derived from a lymph node metastasis of a melanoma patient | Modeling of anticancer drugs. | |
| HT-29 | A human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line with epithelial morphology | Sensitive to the chemotherapeutic drugs used in standard treatment for colorectal cancer | |
| Rat cell line—IPC-81 | Promyelotic leukemia rat cell line IPC-81 | Employed in cytotoxicity assays of ILs | |
| Protozoa |
| Free-living unicellular ciliated protozoa | Commonly employed endpoint for the assessment of the environmental toxicity |
| Tadpoles |
| Larvae of the frogs, typical amphibious animals bridging the gap between aquatic and terrestrial animals. | Regularly implicated for toxicity testing purposes and risk assessments, have been recommended by the EU-TGD. |
| Yeast |
| Eukaryotic model organism, small in size, reproduction time quick and economic. | Important species for modeling of metal oxide nanoparticles |
Representative list of publicly available databases related to the environmental toxicity due to pharmaceuticals
| Database | Country/organizations in charge | Website |
|---|---|---|
| ACToR | US EPA National Center for Computational Toxicology |
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| BDSM | University of Louisville |
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| Cal/EPA | State of California EPA |
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| CCRIS (Chemical carcinogenesis research information system) | US National Library of Medicine (NLM) |
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| CPDB (Carcinogenic potency database) | University of California, Berkeley |
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| Danish (Q)SAR | Danish EPA |
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| DEMETRA | EC-funded project |
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| DevTox | German industry and government |
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| DSSTox (Distributed Structure-Searchable Toxicity database) | National Center for Computational Toxicology, US EPA |
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| ECOTOX | US EPA |
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| ESIS (European Chemical Substances Information system) | Joint Research Centre of the European Commission |
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| EXTOXNET (The EXtension TOXicology NETwork) | Cooperative effort of University of California-Davis, Oregon State University, Michigan State University, Cornell University, and the University of Idaho |
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| FDA Poisonous Plant Database | US FDA and Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN) |
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| GAC (Genetic Alterations in Cancer) | US National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) |
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| Gene-Tox | US NLM |
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| HERA (Human and Environmental Risk Assessment) | A.I.S.E., the international Association for Soaps, Detergents and Maintenance Products official representative body of industries in Europe. |
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| Household Products Database | US Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) |
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| IARC Monograph (International Agency for Research on Cancer Monograph) | World Health Organization |
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| IRIS (Integrated Risk Information System) | National Center for Environmental Assessment (NCEA) and US EPA |
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| ISSCAN | Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Italy, |
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| ITER (International Toxicity Estimates for Risk) | TERA (Toxicity Excellence for Risk Assessment) |
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| IUCLID (International Uniform ChemicaL Information Database) | OECD, EU Biocides and EU REACH |
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| JECDB | Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare |
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| JRC QSTR Database | European Commission, Joint Research Centre’s |
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| KATE (KAshinhou Tool for Ecotoxicity) | Japanese National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES), Ministry of the Environment (MoE), Government of Japan |
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| MRL (Minimal Risk Levels) | US DHHS and Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry |
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| NPIC | National Pesticide Information Center through Oregon State University and US EPA | 166.1 |
| NTP (National Toxicology Program) | US NIH/NIEHS |
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| PAN Pesticide | Pesticide Action Network, North America |
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| Pesticide Database | Toyohashi University of Technology, Japan |
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| RITA (Registry of Industrial Toxicology Animal-data) | Fraunhofer Institute of Toxicology and Experimental Medicine (ITEM) Hannover |
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| TEXTRATOX | The University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture |
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| TOXNET | US National Library of Medicine (NLM) |
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| ToxRefDB | US EPA |
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| Toxtree | European Commission, Joint Research Centre |
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| TSCATS (Toxic Substances Control Act Test Submissions) | US EPA |
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| USGS | US Geological Survey |
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| 197.1 WikiPharma | Swedish research programme MistraPharma |
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An illustrative list of available expert systems to predict diverse endpoints of environmental toxicity
| Expert system | Country/Organization | Endpoints and source of data | Website |
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| US EPA, NHEERL | Assessment Tools for the Evaluation of Risk (ASTER) designed to provide high quality data for discrete chemicals (databases like ECOTOX and EcoChem), and QSTR-based estimates |
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| EC funded project (Project no. 022674SSPI) | Computer Assisted Evaluation of industrial chemical Substances According to Regulations (CAESAR) generates reproducible toxicity models. Five endpoints considered are bioconcentration factor , skin sensitization, carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, developmental toxicity |
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| LMC University “As Zlatarov”, Bourgas, Bulgaria | Platform for models and databases related to the environment fate of chemicals such as abiotic and biotic degradation, bioaccumulation, and acute aquatic toxicity. |
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| Harvard University Office of Technology Development | Deductive estimation of risk from existing Knowledge (DEREK) consist of 21 structural alerts for teratogenicity including four alerts and associated reasoning rules and examples for estrogenicity. |
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| Lhasa Limited | Covering 361 toxicological endpoints alerts with toxicophore. The skin sensitization knowledge base was developed in collaboration with Unilever in 1993 using its database of GPMT data for 294 chemicals. Version 9.0.0 contains 64 alerts for skin sensitization. |
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| US EPA | Hazard assessment of environmentally occurring pharmaceuticals to fish, daphnia, and green algae using ECOlogical Structure–Activity Relationships (ECOSAR). |
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| CompuDrug Inc. | Teratogenicty and reproductive toxicity |
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| MultiCASE Inc. | Predictive models for blue gill, FHM, rainbow trout, and red killifish are available. 180 modules covering various areas of toxicology and pharmacology endpoints including skin sensitization, retinoids, developmental toxicity, FDA/TERIS developmental toxicity, developmental toxicants in FDA teratogenicity are available |
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| Laboratory of Mathematical Chemistry, LMC University “As Zlatarov”, Bourgas, Bulgaria | Uses the response-surface approach for modeling acute toxicity for two types of toxicochemical domains: noncovalent (reversible) acting chemicals and irreversible covalent bioreactive chemicals. Interspecies correlations for acute toxicity to 17 aquatic species, such as fish, snail, tadpole, hydrozoan, crustacean, insect larvae, and bacteria have been developed |
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| OECD, Paris | A platform that allows for chemical information management, similarity searches, and toxicological profiling. |
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| US FDA/CDER | Predicts cancer-causing potential by applying the rules of SAR analysis, mimicking the decision logic of human experts, and incorporating knowledge of how chemicals cause cancer |
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| Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd., Allschwil, Switzerland | Fragments developed from the analysis of 3570 compounds with reproductive effects listed in RTECS. |
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| Institute of Biomedical Chemistry of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Moscow | Abortion inducer, alkylator, carcinogenic, DNA intercalator, DNA repair enzyme inhibitor, DNA synthesis inhibitor, DNA topoisomerase ATP hydrolyzing Inhibitor, DNA topoisomerase inhibitor, DOPA decarboxylase inhibitor, embryotoxic, estradiol 17β-dehydrogenase stimulant, ER modulator, estrone sulfatase inhibitor, estrone sulfotransferase stimulant, fertility enhancer, menopausal disorders treatment, mutagenic, uterine stimulant, and a collection of diverse set of receptor agonists and antagonists. |
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| MRC “MEDTOXECO”, Department of General Hygiene, Russia and IBMC RAMS, Russia | Structure–Activity Relationships for Environmental Toxicology (SARET) model is designed for statistical analysis of data and calculation of unknown parameters of substances on the basis of QSARs. Provides the information necessary to evaluate the hazard of chemicals and to estimate their unknown characteristics. |
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| Russia | Tools for environmental risk assessment (TERA) contains information about assessment of multidomain risk, assessment of carcinogenic potency risk, prediction of lead concentrations in blood of fetus, children, adults, health risk connected with lead exposure and prediction of emission of chemical substances |
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| TerraBase Inc., Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | Stand-alone neural network -based program to compute the acute toxicity of organic chemicals to the FHM using a proprietary neural network algorithm |
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| BIOVIA | TOxicity Prediction by C(K)omputer Assisted Technology (TOPKAT) uses a range QSAR models for assessing acute toxicity to FHM and Daphnia. It comprises two sets of skin sensitization models. The TOPKAT modeling has been employed by the Danish EPA in their project to develop QSTR models for around 47,000 organic substances on the European Inventory of Existing Commercial chemical Substances (EINECS) |
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| European Union Reference Laboratory for alternatives to animal testing (EURL-ECVAM) | Open-source computer program of Joint Research Centre (EC) that encodes several chemical similarity indices in order to facilitate the grouping of chemicals, thereby supporting the development of chemicals and the application of read-across between analogs |
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