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Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.

Two physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for trichloroethylene (TCE) in mice and humans were calibrated with new toxicokinetic data sets. Calibration is an important step in model development, essential to a legitimate use of models for research or regulatory purposes. A Bayesian statistical...

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Autor principal: Bois, F Y
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10807558
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author Bois, F Y
author_facet Bois, F Y
author_sort Bois, F Y
collection PubMed
description Two physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for trichloroethylene (TCE) in mice and humans were calibrated with new toxicokinetic data sets. Calibration is an important step in model development, essential to a legitimate use of models for research or regulatory purposes. A Bayesian statistical framework was used to combine prior information about the model parameters with the data likelihood to yield posterior parameter distributions. For mice, these distributions represent uncertainty. For humans, the use of a population statistical model yielded estimates of both variability and uncertainty in human toxicokinetics of TCE. After adjustment of the models by Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling, the mouse model agreed with a large part of the data. Yet, some data on secondary metabolites were not fit well. The posterior parameter distributions obtained for mice were quite narrow (coefficient of variation [CV] of about 10 or 20%), but these CVs might be underestimated because of the incomplete fit of the model. The data fit, for humans, was better than for mice. Yet, some improvement of the model is needed to correctly describe trichloroethanol concentrations over long time periods. Posterior uncertainties about the population means corresponded to 10-20% CV. In terms of human population variability, volumes and flows varied across subject by approximately 20% CV. The variability was somewhat higher for partition coefficients (between 30 and 40%) and much higher for the metabolic parameters (standard deviations representing about a factor of 2). Finally, the analysis points to differences between human males and females in the toxicokinetics of TCE. The significance of these differences in terms of risk remains to be investigated.
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spelling pubmed-16377662006-11-17 Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics. Bois, F Y Environ Health Perspect Research Article Two physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for trichloroethylene (TCE) in mice and humans were calibrated with new toxicokinetic data sets. Calibration is an important step in model development, essential to a legitimate use of models for research or regulatory purposes. A Bayesian statistical framework was used to combine prior information about the model parameters with the data likelihood to yield posterior parameter distributions. For mice, these distributions represent uncertainty. For humans, the use of a population statistical model yielded estimates of both variability and uncertainty in human toxicokinetics of TCE. After adjustment of the models by Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling, the mouse model agreed with a large part of the data. Yet, some data on secondary metabolites were not fit well. The posterior parameter distributions obtained for mice were quite narrow (coefficient of variation [CV] of about 10 or 20%), but these CVs might be underestimated because of the incomplete fit of the model. The data fit, for humans, was better than for mice. Yet, some improvement of the model is needed to correctly describe trichloroethanol concentrations over long time periods. Posterior uncertainties about the population means corresponded to 10-20% CV. In terms of human population variability, volumes and flows varied across subject by approximately 20% CV. The variability was somewhat higher for partition coefficients (between 30 and 40%) and much higher for the metabolic parameters (standard deviations representing about a factor of 2). Finally, the analysis points to differences between human males and females in the toxicokinetics of TCE. The significance of these differences in terms of risk remains to be investigated. 2000-05 /pmc/articles/PMC1637766/ /pubmed/10807558 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Bois, F Y
Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title_full Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title_fullStr Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title_full_unstemmed Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title_short Statistical analysis of Fisher et al. PBPK model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
title_sort statistical analysis of fisher et al. pbpk model of trichloroethylene kinetics.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10807558
work_keys_str_mv AT boisfy statisticalanalysisoffisheretalpbpkmodeloftrichloroethylenekinetics