The value of selected in vitro and in silico methods to predict acute oral toxicity in a regulatory context: results from the European Project ACuteTox.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1549CBC633C4
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The value of selected in vitro and in silico methods to predict acute oral toxicity in a regulatory context: results from the European Project ACuteTox.
Journal
Toxicology in Vitro
Author(s)
Prieto P., Kinsner-Ovaskainen A., Stanzel S., Albella B., Artursson P., Campillo N., Cecchelli R., Cerrato L., Díaz L., Di Consiglio E., Guerra A., Gombau L., Herrera G., Honegger P., Landry C., O'Connor J.E., Páez J.A., Quintas G., Svensson R., Turco L., Zurich M.G., Zurbano M.J., Kopp-Schneider A.
ISSN
1879-3177 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0887-2333
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Volume
27
Number
4
Pages
1357-1376
Language
english
Abstract
ACuteTox is a project within the 6th European Framework Programme which had as one of its goals to develop, optimise and prevalidate a non-animal testing strategy for predicting human acute oral toxicity. In its last 6 months, a challenging exercise was conducted to assess the predictive capacity of the developed testing strategies and final identification of the most promising ones. Thirty-two chemicals were tested blind in the battery of in vitro and in silico methods selected during the first phase of the project. This paper describes the classification approaches studied: single step procedures and two step tiered testing strategies. In summary, four in vitro testing strategies were proposed as best performing in terms of predictive capacity with respect to the European acute oral toxicity classification. In addition, a heuristic testing strategy is suggested that combines the prediction results gained from the neutral red uptake assay performed in 3T3 cells, with information on neurotoxicity alerts identified by the primary rat brain aggregates test method. Octanol-water partition coefficients and in silico prediction of intestinal absorption and blood-brain barrier passage are also considered. This approach allows to reduce the number of chemicals wrongly predicted as not classified (LD50>2000 mg/kg b.w.).
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
20/06/2013 17:43
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:44
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