New Approach Methodologies for the Endocrine Activity Toolbox: Environmental Assessment for Fish and Amphibians

Author:

Mitchell Constance A.1ORCID,Burden Natalie2,Bonnell Mark3,Hecker Markus4,Hutchinson Thomas H.5,Jagla Magdalena3,LaLone Carlie A.6ORCID,Lagadic Laurent7,Lynn Scott G.8,Shore Bryon3,Song You9ORCID,Vliet Sara M.10ORCID,Wheeler James R.11,Embry Michelle R.1

Affiliation:

1. The Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Washington DC USA

2. National Centre for the 3Rs (NC3Rs) London United Kingdom

3. Environment and Climate Change Canada Ottawa Canada

4. Toxicology Centre and School of the Environment & Sustainability University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon Canada

5. Reckitt R&D Hull United Kingdom

6. Office of Research and Development, Great Lakes Toxicology & Ecology Division US Environmental Protection Agency Duluth Minnesota

7. Research and Development, Crop Science, Environmental Safety, Bayer Monheim am Rhein Germany

8. Office of Pesticide Programs US Environmental Protection Agency Washington DC

9. Norwegian Institute for Water Research Oslo Norway

10. Office of Research and Development, Scientific Computing and Data Curation Division US Environmental Protection Agency Duluth Minnesota

11. Corteva Agriscience Bergen op Zoom The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractMultiple in vivo test guidelines focusing on the estrogen, androgen, thyroid, and steroidogenesis pathways have been developed and validated for mammals, amphibians, or fish. However, these tests are resource‐intensive and often use a large number of laboratory animals. Developing alternatives for in vivo tests is consistent with the replacement, reduction, and refinement principles for animal welfare considerations, which are supported by increasing mandates to move toward an “animal‐free” testing paradigm worldwide. New approach methodologies (NAMs) hold great promise to identify molecular, cellular, and tissue changes that can be used to predict effects reliably and more efficiently at the individual level (and potentially on populations) while reducing the number of animals used in (eco)toxicological testing for endocrine disruption. In a collaborative effort, experts from government, academia, and industry met in 2020 to discuss the current challenges of testing for endocrine activity assessment for fish and amphibians. Continuing this cross‐sector initiative, our review focuses on the current state of the science regarding the use of NAMs to identify chemical‐induced endocrine effects. The present study highlights the challenges of using NAMs for safety assessment and what work is needed to reduce their uncertainties and increase their acceptance in regulatory processes. We have reviewed the current NAMs available for endocrine activity assessment including in silico, in vitro, and eleutheroembryo models. New approach methodologies can be integrated as part of a weight‐of‐evidence approach for hazard or risk assessment using the adverse outcome pathway framework. The development and utilization of NAMs not only allows for replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal testing but can also provide robust and fit‐for‐purpose methods to identify chemicals acting via endocrine mechanisms. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;42:757–777. © 2023 The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Environmental Chemistry

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