| Literature DB >> 33837437 |
Rob B M De Vries1,2, Michelle Angrish3, Patience Browne4, Jan Brozek5, Andrew A Rooney6, Daniele S Wikoff7, Paul Whaley1,8, Stephen W Edwards9, Rebecca L Morgan5, Ingrid L Druwe3, Sebastian Hoffmann1,10, Thomas Hartung11, Kristina Thayer3, Marc T Avey12, Brandiese E J Beverly6, Maicon Falavigna5,13, Catherine Gibbons3, Katy Goyak14, Andrew Kraft3, Fernando Nampo15, Amir Qaseem16, Meg Sears17, Jasvinder A Singh18, Catherine Willett19, Erin Y Yost3, Holger Schünemann5,20, Katya Tsaioun1.
Abstract
The workshop “Application of evidence-based methods to construct mechanistic frameworks for the development and use of non-animal toxicity tests” was organized by the Evidence-based Toxicology Collaboration and hosted by the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation Working Group on June 12, 2019. The purpose of the workshop was to bring together international regulatory bodies, risk assessors, academic scientists, and industry to explore how systematic review methods and the adverse outcome pathway framework could be combined to develop and use mechanistic test methods for predicting the toxicity of chemical substances in an evidence-based manner. The meeting covered the history of biological frameworks, the way adverse outcome pathways are currently developed, the basic principles of systematic methodology, including systematic reviews and evidence maps, and assessment of certainty in models, and adverse outcome pathways in particular. Specific topics were discussed via case studies in small break-out groups. The group concluded that adverse outcome pathways provide an important framework to support mechanism-based assessment in environmental health. The process of their development has a few challenges that could be addressed with systematic methods and automation tools. Addressing these challenges will increase the transparency of the evidence behind adverse outcome pathways and the consistency with which they are defined; this in turn will increase their value for supporting public health decisions. It was suggested to explore the details of applying systematic methods to adverse outcome pathway development in a series of case studies and workshops.Entities:
Keywords: evidence-based; non-animal method ; systematic review; adverse outcome pathway; risk assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33837437 PMCID: PMC9394185 DOI: 10.14573/altex.2101211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ALTEX ISSN: 1868-596X Impact factor: 6.250