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Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making

BACKGROUND: Assessing adverse effects from environmental chemical exposure is integral to public health policies. Toxicology assays identifying early biological changes from chemical exposure are increasing our ability to evaluate links between early biological disturbances and subsequent overt down...

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Autores principales: Woodruff, Tracey J., Zeise, Lauren, Axelrad, Daniel A., Guyton, Kathryn Z., Janssen, Sarah, Miller, Mark, Miller, Gregory G., Schwartz, Jackie M., Alexeeff, George, Anderson, Henry, Birnbaum, Linda, Bois, Frederic, Cogliano, Vincent James, Crofton, Kevin, Euling, Susan Y., Foster, Paul M.D., Germolec, Dori R., Gray, Earl, Hattis, Dale B., Kyle, Amy D., Luebke, Robert W., Luster, Michael I., Portier, Chris, Rice, Deborah C., Solomon, Gina, Vandenberg, John, Zoeller, R. Thomas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2592280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19057713
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.11516
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author Woodruff, Tracey J.
Zeise, Lauren
Axelrad, Daniel A.
Guyton, Kathryn Z.
Janssen, Sarah
Miller, Mark
Miller, Gregory G.
Schwartz, Jackie M.
Alexeeff, George
Anderson, Henry
Birnbaum, Linda
Bois, Frederic
Cogliano, Vincent James
Crofton, Kevin
Euling, Susan Y.
Foster, Paul M.D.
Germolec, Dori R.
Gray, Earl
Hattis, Dale B.
Kyle, Amy D.
Luebke, Robert W.
Luster, Michael I.
Portier, Chris
Rice, Deborah C.
Solomon, Gina
Vandenberg, John
Zoeller, R. Thomas
author_facet Woodruff, Tracey J.
Zeise, Lauren
Axelrad, Daniel A.
Guyton, Kathryn Z.
Janssen, Sarah
Miller, Mark
Miller, Gregory G.
Schwartz, Jackie M.
Alexeeff, George
Anderson, Henry
Birnbaum, Linda
Bois, Frederic
Cogliano, Vincent James
Crofton, Kevin
Euling, Susan Y.
Foster, Paul M.D.
Germolec, Dori R.
Gray, Earl
Hattis, Dale B.
Kyle, Amy D.
Luebke, Robert W.
Luster, Michael I.
Portier, Chris
Rice, Deborah C.
Solomon, Gina
Vandenberg, John
Zoeller, R. Thomas
author_sort Woodruff, Tracey J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Assessing adverse effects from environmental chemical exposure is integral to public health policies. Toxicology assays identifying early biological changes from chemical exposure are increasing our ability to evaluate links between early biological disturbances and subsequent overt downstream effects. A workshop was held to consider how the resulting data inform consideration of an “adverse effect” in the context of hazard identification and risk assessment. OBJECTIVES: Our objective here is to review what is known about the relationships between chemical exposure, early biological effects (upstream events), and later overt effects (downstream events) through three case studies (thyroid hormone disruption, antiandrogen effects, immune system disruption) and to consider how to evaluate hazard and risk when early biological effect data are available. DISCUSSION: Each case study presents data on the toxicity pathways linking early biological perturbations with downstream overt effects. Case studies also emphasize several factors that can influence risk of overt disease as a result from early biological perturbations, including background chemical exposures, underlying individual biological processes, and disease susceptibility. Certain effects resulting from exposure during periods of sensitivity may be irreversible. A chemical can act through multiple modes of action, resulting in similar or different overt effects. CONCLUSIONS: For certain classes of early perturbations, sufficient information on the disease process is known, so hazard and quantitative risk assessment can proceed using information on upstream biological perturbations. Upstream data will support improved approaches for considering developmental stage, background exposures, disease status, and other factors important to assessing hazard and risk for the whole population.
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spelling pubmed-25922802008-12-04 Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making Woodruff, Tracey J. Zeise, Lauren Axelrad, Daniel A. Guyton, Kathryn Z. Janssen, Sarah Miller, Mark Miller, Gregory G. Schwartz, Jackie M. Alexeeff, George Anderson, Henry Birnbaum, Linda Bois, Frederic Cogliano, Vincent James Crofton, Kevin Euling, Susan Y. Foster, Paul M.D. Germolec, Dori R. Gray, Earl Hattis, Dale B. Kyle, Amy D. Luebke, Robert W. Luster, Michael I. Portier, Chris Rice, Deborah C. Solomon, Gina Vandenberg, John Zoeller, R. Thomas Environ Health Perspect Research BACKGROUND: Assessing adverse effects from environmental chemical exposure is integral to public health policies. Toxicology assays identifying early biological changes from chemical exposure are increasing our ability to evaluate links between early biological disturbances and subsequent overt downstream effects. A workshop was held to consider how the resulting data inform consideration of an “adverse effect” in the context of hazard identification and risk assessment. OBJECTIVES: Our objective here is to review what is known about the relationships between chemical exposure, early biological effects (upstream events), and later overt effects (downstream events) through three case studies (thyroid hormone disruption, antiandrogen effects, immune system disruption) and to consider how to evaluate hazard and risk when early biological effect data are available. DISCUSSION: Each case study presents data on the toxicity pathways linking early biological perturbations with downstream overt effects. Case studies also emphasize several factors that can influence risk of overt disease as a result from early biological perturbations, including background chemical exposures, underlying individual biological processes, and disease susceptibility. Certain effects resulting from exposure during periods of sensitivity may be irreversible. A chemical can act through multiple modes of action, resulting in similar or different overt effects. CONCLUSIONS: For certain classes of early perturbations, sufficient information on the disease process is known, so hazard and quantitative risk assessment can proceed using information on upstream biological perturbations. Upstream data will support improved approaches for considering developmental stage, background exposures, disease status, and other factors important to assessing hazard and risk for the whole population. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 2008-11 2008-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC2592280/ /pubmed/19057713 http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.11516 Text en http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/ Publication of EHP lies in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from EHP may be reprinted freely. Use of materials published in EHP should be acknowledged (for example, ?Reproduced with permission from Environmental Health Perspectives?); pertinent reference information should be provided for the article from which the material was reproduced. Articles from EHP, especially the News section, may contain photographs or illustrations copyrighted by other commercial organizations or individuals that may not be used without obtaining prior approval from the holder of the copyright.
spellingShingle Research
Woodruff, Tracey J.
Zeise, Lauren
Axelrad, Daniel A.
Guyton, Kathryn Z.
Janssen, Sarah
Miller, Mark
Miller, Gregory G.
Schwartz, Jackie M.
Alexeeff, George
Anderson, Henry
Birnbaum, Linda
Bois, Frederic
Cogliano, Vincent James
Crofton, Kevin
Euling, Susan Y.
Foster, Paul M.D.
Germolec, Dori R.
Gray, Earl
Hattis, Dale B.
Kyle, Amy D.
Luebke, Robert W.
Luster, Michael I.
Portier, Chris
Rice, Deborah C.
Solomon, Gina
Vandenberg, John
Zoeller, R. Thomas
Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title_full Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title_fullStr Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title_full_unstemmed Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title_short Meeting Report: Moving Upstream—Evaluating Adverse Upstream End Points for Improved Risk Assessment and Decision-Making
title_sort meeting report: moving upstream—evaluating adverse upstream end points for improved risk assessment and decision-making
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2592280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19057713
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.11516
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