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Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.

At the request of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), the National Toxicology Program organized an independent and open peer review to evaluate the scientific evidence on low-dose effects and nonmonotonic dose-response relationships for endocrine-disrupting chemicals in mammalian sp...

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Autores principales: Melnick, Ronald, Lucier, George, Wolfe, Mary, Hall, Roxanne, Stancel, George, Prins, Gail, Gallo, Michael, Reuhl, Kenneth, Ho, Shuk-Mei, Brown, Terry, Moore, John, Leakey, Julian, Haseman, Joseph, Kohn, Michael
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11940462
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author Melnick, Ronald
Lucier, George
Wolfe, Mary
Hall, Roxanne
Stancel, George
Prins, Gail
Gallo, Michael
Reuhl, Kenneth
Ho, Shuk-Mei
Brown, Terry
Moore, John
Leakey, Julian
Haseman, Joseph
Kohn, Michael
author_facet Melnick, Ronald
Lucier, George
Wolfe, Mary
Hall, Roxanne
Stancel, George
Prins, Gail
Gallo, Michael
Reuhl, Kenneth
Ho, Shuk-Mei
Brown, Terry
Moore, John
Leakey, Julian
Haseman, Joseph
Kohn, Michael
author_sort Melnick, Ronald
collection PubMed
description At the request of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), the National Toxicology Program organized an independent and open peer review to evaluate the scientific evidence on low-dose effects and nonmonotonic dose-response relationships for endocrine-disrupting chemicals in mammalian species. For this peer review, "low-dose effects" referred to biologic changes that occur in the range of human exposures or at doses lower than those typically used in the standard testing paradigm of the U.S. EPA for evaluating reproductive and developmental toxicity. The demonstration that an effect is adverse was not required because in many cases the long-term health consequences of altered endocrine function during development have not been fully characterized. A unique aspect of this peer review was the willing submission of individual animal data by principal investigators of primary research groups active in this field and the independent statistical reanalyses of selected parameters prior to the peer review meeting by a subpanel of statisticians. The expert peer-review panel (the panel) also considered mechanistic data that might influence the plausibility of low-dose effects and identified study design issues or other biologic factors that might account for differences in reported outcomes among studies. The panel found that low-dose effects, as defined for this review, have been demonstrated in laboratory animals exposed to certain endocrine-active agents. In some cases where low-dose effects have been reported, the findings have not been replicated. The shape of the dose-response curves for reported effects varied with the end point and dosing regimen and were low-dose linear, threshold-appearing, or nonmonotonic. The findings of the panel indicate that the current testing paradigm used for assessments of reproductive and developmental toxicity should be revisited to see whether changes are needed regarding dose selection, animal-model selection, age when animals are evaluated, and the end points being measured following exposure to endocrine-active agents.
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spelling pubmed-12408072005-11-08 Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review. Melnick, Ronald Lucier, George Wolfe, Mary Hall, Roxanne Stancel, George Prins, Gail Gallo, Michael Reuhl, Kenneth Ho, Shuk-Mei Brown, Terry Moore, John Leakey, Julian Haseman, Joseph Kohn, Michael Environ Health Perspect Research Article At the request of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), the National Toxicology Program organized an independent and open peer review to evaluate the scientific evidence on low-dose effects and nonmonotonic dose-response relationships for endocrine-disrupting chemicals in mammalian species. For this peer review, "low-dose effects" referred to biologic changes that occur in the range of human exposures or at doses lower than those typically used in the standard testing paradigm of the U.S. EPA for evaluating reproductive and developmental toxicity. The demonstration that an effect is adverse was not required because in many cases the long-term health consequences of altered endocrine function during development have not been fully characterized. A unique aspect of this peer review was the willing submission of individual animal data by principal investigators of primary research groups active in this field and the independent statistical reanalyses of selected parameters prior to the peer review meeting by a subpanel of statisticians. The expert peer-review panel (the panel) also considered mechanistic data that might influence the plausibility of low-dose effects and identified study design issues or other biologic factors that might account for differences in reported outcomes among studies. The panel found that low-dose effects, as defined for this review, have been demonstrated in laboratory animals exposed to certain endocrine-active agents. In some cases where low-dose effects have been reported, the findings have not been replicated. The shape of the dose-response curves for reported effects varied with the end point and dosing regimen and were low-dose linear, threshold-appearing, or nonmonotonic. The findings of the panel indicate that the current testing paradigm used for assessments of reproductive and developmental toxicity should be revisited to see whether changes are needed regarding dose selection, animal-model selection, age when animals are evaluated, and the end points being measured following exposure to endocrine-active agents. 2002-04 /pmc/articles/PMC1240807/ /pubmed/11940462 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Melnick, Ronald
Lucier, George
Wolfe, Mary
Hall, Roxanne
Stancel, George
Prins, Gail
Gallo, Michael
Reuhl, Kenneth
Ho, Shuk-Mei
Brown, Terry
Moore, John
Leakey, Julian
Haseman, Joseph
Kohn, Michael
Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title_full Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title_fullStr Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title_full_unstemmed Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title_short Summary of the National Toxicology Program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
title_sort summary of the national toxicology program's report of the endocrine disruptors low-dose peer review.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11940462
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