EFSA asked the Panel on Plant Protection Products and their residues to deliver a Scientific Opinion on testing and interpretation of comparative in vitro metabolism studies for both new active substances and existing ones. The main aim of comparative in vitro metabolism studies of pesticide active substances is to evaluate whether all significant metabolites formed in the human in vitro test system, as a surrogate of the in vivo situation, are also present at comparable level in animal species tested in toxicological studies and, therefore, if their potential toxicity has been appropriately covered by animal studies. The studies may also help to decide which animal model, with regard to a particular compound, is the most relevant for humans. In the experimental strategy, primary hepatocytes in suspension or culture are recommended since hepatocytes are considered the most representative in vitro system for prediction of in vivo metabolites. The experimental design of 3 × 3 × 3 (concentrations, time points, technical replicates, on pooled hepatocytes) will maximise the chance to identify unique (UHM) and disproportionate (DHM) human metabolites. When DHM and UHM are being assessed, test item-related radioactivity recovery and metabolite profile are the most important parameters. Subsequently, structural characterisation of the assigned metabolites is performed with appropriate analytical techniques. In toxicological assessment of metabolites, the uncertainty factor approach is the first alternative to testing option, followed by new approach methodologies (QSAR, read-across, in vitro methods), and only if these fail, in vivo animal toxicity studies may be performed. Knowledge of in vitro metabolites in human and animal hepatocytes would enable toxicological evaluation of all metabolites of concern, and, furthermore, add useful pieces of information for detection and evaluation of metabolites in different matrices (crops, livestock, environment), improve biomonitoring efforts via better toxicokinetic understanding, and ultimately, develop regulatory schemes employing physiologically based or physiology-mimicking in silico and/or in vitro test systems to anticipate the exposure of humans to potentially hazardous substances in plant protection products.

Scientific Opinion of the Scientific Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues (PPR Panel) on testing and interpretation of comparative in vitro metabolism studies / A.F. Hernandez-Jerez, P. Adriaanse, A. Aldrich, P. Berny, T. Coja, S. Duquesne, A. Focks, M. Marinovich, M. Millet, O. Pelkonen, S. Pieper, A. Tiktak, C.J. Topping, A. Widenfalk, M. Wilks, G. Wolterink, U. Gundert-Remy, J. Louisse, S. Rudaz, E. Testai, A. Lostia, J.-. Dorne, J.M. Parra Morte. - In: EFSA JOURNAL. - ISSN 1831-4732. - 19:12(2021 Dec 23), pp. e06970.1-e06970.61. [10.2903/j.efsa.2021.6970]

Scientific Opinion of the Scientific Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues (PPR Panel) on testing and interpretation of comparative in vitro metabolism studies

M. Marinovich;
2021

Abstract

EFSA asked the Panel on Plant Protection Products and their residues to deliver a Scientific Opinion on testing and interpretation of comparative in vitro metabolism studies for both new active substances and existing ones. The main aim of comparative in vitro metabolism studies of pesticide active substances is to evaluate whether all significant metabolites formed in the human in vitro test system, as a surrogate of the in vivo situation, are also present at comparable level in animal species tested in toxicological studies and, therefore, if their potential toxicity has been appropriately covered by animal studies. The studies may also help to decide which animal model, with regard to a particular compound, is the most relevant for humans. In the experimental strategy, primary hepatocytes in suspension or culture are recommended since hepatocytes are considered the most representative in vitro system for prediction of in vivo metabolites. The experimental design of 3 × 3 × 3 (concentrations, time points, technical replicates, on pooled hepatocytes) will maximise the chance to identify unique (UHM) and disproportionate (DHM) human metabolites. When DHM and UHM are being assessed, test item-related radioactivity recovery and metabolite profile are the most important parameters. Subsequently, structural characterisation of the assigned metabolites is performed with appropriate analytical techniques. In toxicological assessment of metabolites, the uncertainty factor approach is the first alternative to testing option, followed by new approach methodologies (QSAR, read-across, in vitro methods), and only if these fail, in vivo animal toxicity studies may be performed. Knowledge of in vitro metabolites in human and animal hepatocytes would enable toxicological evaluation of all metabolites of concern, and, furthermore, add useful pieces of information for detection and evaluation of metabolites in different matrices (crops, livestock, environment), improve biomonitoring efforts via better toxicokinetic understanding, and ultimately, develop regulatory schemes employing physiologically based or physiology-mimicking in silico and/or in vitro test systems to anticipate the exposure of humans to potentially hazardous substances in plant protection products.
English
PBK; QSAR; clearance; in silico; interspecies metabolism; reactive metabolites; suspension/plated hepatocytes; xenobiotic
Settore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 2: Zero hunger
23-dic-2021
Wiley Open Access
19
12
e06970
1
61
61
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Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
pubmed
crossref
wos
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Scientific Opinion of the Scientific Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues (PPR Panel) on testing and interpretation of comparative in vitro metabolism studies / A.F. Hernandez-Jerez, P. Adriaanse, A. Aldrich, P. Berny, T. Coja, S. Duquesne, A. Focks, M. Marinovich, M. Millet, O. Pelkonen, S. Pieper, A. Tiktak, C.J. Topping, A. Widenfalk, M. Wilks, G. Wolterink, U. Gundert-Remy, J. Louisse, S. Rudaz, E. Testai, A. Lostia, J.-. Dorne, J.M. Parra Morte. - In: EFSA JOURNAL. - ISSN 1831-4732. - 19:12(2021 Dec 23), pp. e06970.1-e06970.61. [10.2903/j.efsa.2021.6970]
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A.F. Hernandez-Jerez, P. Adriaanse, A. Aldrich, P. Berny, T. Coja, S. Duquesne, A. Focks, M. Marinovich, M. Millet, O. Pelkonen, S. Pieper, A. Tiktak, C.J. Topping, A. Widenfalk, M. Wilks, G. Wolterink, U. Gundert-Remy, J. Louisse, S. Rudaz, E. Testai, A. Lostia, J.-. Dorne, J.M. Parra Morte
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/925242
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