Severity of effect considerations regarding the use of mutation as a toxicological endpoint for risk assessment: A report from the 8th International Workshop on Genotoxicity Testing (IWGT)

Author:

Parsons Barbara L.1ORCID,Beal Marc A.2,Dearfield Kerry L.3,Douglas George R.4,Gi Min5,Gollapudi B. Bhaskar6,Heflich Robert H.1,Horibata Katsuyoshi7,Kenyon Michelle8,Long Alexandra S.9,Lovell David P.10,Lynch Anthony M.11,Myers Meagan B.1,Pfuhler Stefan12ORCID,Vespa Alisa13,Zeller Andreas14ORCID,Johnson George E.15ORCID,White Paul A.4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Genetic and Molecular Toxicology, National Center for Toxicological Research U.S. Food and Drug Administration Jefferson Arkansas USA

2. Bureau of Chemical Safety, Health Products and Food Branch Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Department of Agriculture Washington DC USA

4. Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Healthy Environments and Consumer Safety Branch Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. Department of Environmental Risk Assessment Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Medicine Osaka Japan

6. Toxicology Consultant Midland Michigan USA

7. National Institute of Health Sciences Kawasaki Japan

8. Portfolio and Regulatory Strategy, Drug Safety Research and Development Pfizer Groton Connecticut USA

9. Existing Substances Risk Assessment Bureau, Healthy Environments and Consumer Safety Branch Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

10. Population Health Research Institute, St George's Medical School University of London London UK

11. GSK, Genetic Toxicology Ware UK

12. The Procter & Gamble Company Mason Ohio USA

13. Pharmaceutical Drugs Directorate, Health Products and Food Branch Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

14. Pharmaceutical Sciences, pRED Innovation Center Basel Hoffmann‐La Roche Ltd Basel Switzerland

15. Swansea University Medical School Swansea University Swansea Wales UK

Abstract

AbstractExposure levels without appreciable human health risk may be determined by dividing a point of departure on a dose–response curve (e.g., benchmark dose) by a composite adjustment factor (AF). An “effect severity” AF (ESAF) is employed in some regulatory contexts. An ESAF of 10 may be incorporated in the derivation of a health‐based guidance value (HBGV) when a “severe” toxicological endpoint, such as teratogenicity, irreversible reproductive effects, neurotoxicity, or cancer was observed in the reference study. Although mutation data have been used historically for hazard identification, this endpoint is suitable for quantitative dose–response modeling and risk assessment. As part of the 8th International Workshops on Genotoxicity Testing, a sub‐group of the Quantitative Analysis Work Group (WG) explored how the concept of effect severity could be applied to mutation. To approach this question, the WG reviewed the prevailing regulatory guidance on how an ESAF is incorporated into risk assessments, evaluated current knowledge of associations between germline or somatic mutation and severe disease risk, and mined available data on the fraction of human germline mutations expected to cause severe disease. Based on this review and given that mutations are irreversible and some cause severe human disease, in regulatory settings where an ESAF is used, a majority of the WG recommends applying an ESAF value between 2 and 10 when deriving a HBGV from mutation data. This recommendation may need to be revisited in the future if direct measurement of disease‐causing mutations by error‐corrected next generation sequencing clarifies selection of ESAF values.

Publisher

Wiley

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