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Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1
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Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Introduction to Toxicology

Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki,Walter Janssens, Mark Martens

Beltox Seminar, Part 2

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Page 2: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Introduction to Toxicology

• Definition of toxicology• Hazard versus Risk (assessment)• Subspecialties in toxicology• Areas where toxicology is used• Role of the toxicologist• Considerations for toxicity testing• Principles in toxicology• Discussion & conclusion

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Page 3: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Definition of toxicology

Toxicology:• Used to be the study of the adverse effects of

substances / xenobiotics on living organisms• Modern toxicology goes beyond that:

• Also applies to ‘endogeneous’ molecules• Assimilates knowledge from biology, chemistry,

physiology, biochemistry, genetics, ...• Applies Hazard and risk Assessment• Alternative methods are promoted.

Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons, Curtis D. Klaassen, 6 th Ed., 2008

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Page 4: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

• Hazard = toxicity = danger– Potential to cause an adverse effect– Is intrinsic to the agent (chemical)– Cannot be controlled

• Risk– Likelihood that an adverse effect will occur– Is determined by the circumstances (dose,

protection, sensitivity, …)– Control possible (prevention)

Hazard vs Risk (1)

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Page 5: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Hazard vs Risk (2)

Same hazard/danger

High riskLow risk5

«The danger is acceptable if the risk is sufficiently low »

Page 6: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Subspecialties in toxicology

• Safety pharmacology• Acute dose toxicology• Repeated dose toxicology

(subacute, subchronic, chronic)

• Genetic toxicology & Carcinogenicity

• Local tolerance• Reproductive toxicology• In vitro toxicology• Mechanistic toxicology• Toxicological epidemiology• Ecotoxicology

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Page 7: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Areas where Toxicology is used (1)

• Drugs and/or medical devices• Chemicals • Pesticides

– Insecticides– Herbicides– Fungicides

• Food:– Additives / Contaminants – Food packaging materials– Genetically modified organisms

• Consumer goods– Household products– Cosmetics and personal care products

• 7

Page 8: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Areas where Toxicology is used (2)

Frequency of calls according to product type

1.Pharmaceuticals

2.Household products

3.Food & contaminants

4.Plant protection products

5.Cosmetics

6.Plants, fungi

7.Animals

8.Others, e.g.: tabacco, alcohol, drugs...

8

www.poisoncentre.be Annual report 2009

Not precised 0.31%

Others 8.90%

Plants/Fungi 1.74%

Animals1.67%

Food...4.13%

Cosmetics1.98%

Plant protection products3.88%

Household products 28.15%

Pharmaceuticals 49.25%

Page 9: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

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Number of calls

Years

Areas where Toxicology is used (3)

Frequency of calls per year

Page 10: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

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Child 1-4 y: 33%

Child 5-9 y: 5%

Child 10-14 y: 3%

Child ...? y: 6%

Child <1-4 y: 4%

Adult: 49%

Areas where Toxicology is used (4)

Frequency of calls according to age

Page 11: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Role of the Toxicologist in Society (1)

• Study/investigate/determine the toxicological profile of the agent of interest

• Risk assessment– Risk benefit analysis

• Risk communication and education of the public

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Page 12: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Role of the Toxicologist in Society (2)

Toxicologists utilize tools from many other fields including:

• Pharmacology– Pharmacokinetics/”ADME”

• Medicine• Veterinary medicine• Histopathology• Hematology• Clinical chemistry• “-omics” technologies

– Genomics/Proteonomics

• Biostatistics• Mathematical modelling

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Page 13: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Role of the Toxicologist in Society (3)

• Researchers/Academicians/ Investigators– Fundamental research in toxicology methods– Development and/or validation of testing

methods– Training of the next generation

of experts– Scientific advice and expertise

to regulators and industry

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Page 14: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Role of the Toxicologist in Society (4)

• Regulators – Evaluation and/or approval of toxicology

dossiers for regulated products– Prepare/discuss/revise/approve/implement

guidelines for toxicity testing and evaluation– National & international authorities

Be: FOD Volksgezondheid / SPF Santé PublicEU: EMEA / EFSA / ECHA US: FDA / EPA

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Page 15: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

• Industry– Design and conduct of toxicology

strategies & studies– Product safety documentation

(dossiers, material & safety data sheets, classification & labeling ...)

• Medicine– Emergency medicine– Poison management– Forensic medicine

Role of the Toxicologist in Society (5)

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Page 16: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Considerations for Toxicity Testing

• Ethical limits to toxicity testing• 3Rs (Reduction, Refinement, Replacement)• Use of in vitro or alternative systems should be

implemented whenever possible

• Risk benefit considerations• Pharmaceutical for a non-life threatening versus

life threatening indication?• Cosmetics or “lifestyle” product?

• Regulatory requirements• Compliance with regulatory guidelines• Compliance with GLP (Good Laboratory Practice)

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Page 17: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (1)

• Route and site of exposure• e.g.: Local effects vs systemic effects

• Duration and frequency of exposure E.g. ethanol– Acute

• E.g.: redness, CNS effects (loss of reflexes ...)– Chronic

• E.g.: Development of tumors 20 years after exposure to a carcinogen, (liver cirrhosis and formation of scar tissue)

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Page 18: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (2)

• Dose-effect/dose-response and threshold– Establish the dose-effect relationship: Is there an

increasing toxic effect/response with increasing exposure to the toxic agent?

• Toxicology studies typically employ three dose levels with one control group

• Threshold – is there a “safe” dose at or below which there is no effect?

– Safety margin• Does the substance exert its intended beneficial

effect at exposure levels that cause no or minimal toxicity?

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Page 19: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (3)

“population” dose response

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130

% respons

Dosis (g)

Effect

Toxiciteit

Dose (g)

Toxicity

% Response

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Page 20: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (4)

cummulative dose response

ED50 = Effective dose in 50% of the individuals

TD50 = Toxic dose in 50% of the individuals

Dose (g)

% response

Effect: cummu-lative

Toxicity: cummu-lative

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Page 21: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (5)

• Differences in the toxic response– Species and sex differences– Physiological and metabolic differences– Age differences

• The young or old may be more susceptible

– Diseased/compromised populations– Selective toxicity

• eg: Anti-infective drugs and pesticides: greatest toxicity for target infection or pest

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Page 22: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (6)

• Metabolism & Excretion– Biochemical modification (via

enzymes) of substances in the body is intended to increase excretion (and terminate biological activity)

– Occurs in liver, kidney, lung, gastrointestinal track, and other organs

– Can be an important determinant of the duration and intensity of the toxicological effect of a substance

Liver

Adapted from © 2008 Society of Toxicology, http://www.toxicology.org/ai/eo/intro_toxslides.asp

Liver is a primary site

of metabolism

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Page 23: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Some Principles of Toxicology (7)

Metabolism in liver and other organsMetabolism in liver and other organs

Less toxicLess toxic metabolic product excreted metabolic product excreted

(eg: alcohol to water + acetic acid)(eg: alcohol to water + acetic acid)

LiverLiver LungLungKidneyKidney

UrineUrine

Organism exposed to toxic substanceOrganism exposed to toxic substance

Bile, FecesBile, Feces Expired airExpired air23

Page 24: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Metabolism by liver and other organsMetabolism by liver and other organs

Bioactivation to Bioactivation to more toxicmore toxic metabolic product metabolic product

(eg: paracetemol to N-acetyl-p-benzo-quinone imine (NAPQI)(eg: paracetemol to N-acetyl-p-benzo-quinone imine (NAPQI)

Ensuing toxic effectsEnsuing toxic effects

(eg: liver toxicity of paracetamol at high doses)(eg: liver toxicity of paracetamol at high doses)

Organism exposed to substanceOrganism exposed to substance

Some Principles of Toxicology (8)

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Page 25: Introduction to Toxicology Koen Van Deun, Jennifer Sasaki, Walter Janssens, Mark Martens Beltox Seminar, Part 2 1.

Thank You!

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Discussion & Conclusion