Adverse Outcome Pathways: From Research to Regulation
September 3-5, 2014
William H. Natcher Conference Center
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Videocasts of Workshop Plenary Sessions on NIH Website
- Day 1 (Wednesday, Sept. 3; 6 hr 28 min)
- Day 2 (Wednesday, Sept. 4; 3 hr 25 min)
- Day 3 (Wednesday, Sept. 5; 2 hr 12 min)
Summaries of Breakout Group Discussions
- Breakout Group 1: The Process of Regulatory Acceptance
- Breakout Group 2: Using AOPs for Regulatory Decisions: Confidence and Criteria
- Breakout Group 3: Taking Qualitative AOPs to the Next (Quantitative) Level
The traditional model of toxicology testing, which involves treating animals with test substances and observing outcomes, may not be sufficient to serve future scientific and regulatory needs. The science of toxicology is turning towards a new model based on a better understanding of toxicity mechanisms, which will enable prediction of toxic effects in humans.
A key element of a mechanistic understanding of a specific toxicity is the construction of an adverse outcome pathway for that toxicity. An adverse outcome pathway is a conceptual framework constructed from existing knowledge that relates exposure of a type of toxic substance to subsequent molecular and cellular changes that result in illness or injury to an individual or population.
Effective communication between researchers and regulators is a critical determinant of whether new methods or approaches are efficiently translated from the scientific bench to regulatory decision-making practice. This workshop brought together over 100 scientists from industry, academia, U.S. and international regulatory agencies, and animal welfare groups to explore how scientific progress in adverse outcome pathway concepts can improve regulatory assessment of chemical toxicity.
Workshop Presentations
Please note: Most presentation files are large (2 MB or larger) and may take a few moments to open.
Opening Session
Welcome
Warren Casey, NIEHS/NICEATM
Innovation in Toxicology at NCATS
Christopher Austin, U.S. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
From Mode of Action to Adverse Outcome Pathways: Moving Towards Regulatory Applicability
Bette Meek, University of Ottawa
What is an AOP (and What ISN’T It?)
Donna Mendrick, U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Session 1: Building Upon Other Efforts
AOP Activities at the OECD
Joop de Knecht, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
AOP Knowledge Base/Wiki Tool Set
Steven Edwards, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Outcomes from the March Somma Lombardo Workshop
Edward Perkins, U.S. Army
Session 2: AOPs Under Development
Embryonic Vascular Disruption and Adverse Prenatal Outcomes
Nicole Kleinstreuer, ILS/NICEATM
Using Adverse Outcome Pathway Analysis to Identify Gaps in High-Throughput Screening for Thyroid Disruption
Katie Paul, Bayer CropScience
Application of the Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) Concept to Neurotoxicology: A Challenging Approach
Ellen Fritsche, IUF Dusseldorf
AOP Development: After the Heights of the Mountains – the Hardship of the Plains; the Example of Liver Fibrosis
Brigitte Landesmann, European Commission Joint Research Center (JRC)
Fish Early Life Stage: Developing AOPs to Support Targeted Reduction and Replacement
Dan Villeneuve, EPA
Adverse Outcome Pathway for Effects of Anticoagulant Rodenticides on Predatory Birds
Barnett Rattner, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior
Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) for Sustained Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Activation Leading to Rodent Liver Tumor Promotion
Ted Simon, Ted Simon LLC
Developing AOPs from PPAR Activation Leading to Reproductive Toxicity
Malgorzata Nepelska, European Union Joint Research Centre
Framework for Computationally-Predicted AOPs
Shannon Bell, EPA
Session 3: Case Studies: Regulatory Uses for Well-Identified AOPs
Testing of the Predictive Power and Robustness of an AOP Construct for Bile Salt Export Pump Inhibition to Cholestatic Injury
Mathieu Vinken, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
An Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) Framework for Screening for Potential Endocrine Disruption
David Dix, EPA
AOPs and Regulatory Decisions: Problem Formulation, Development and Acceptance
Rita Schoeny, EPA
Identifying Integrated In Vitro/In Silico Testing Strategies (IATA/ITS) by Mapping to the Skin Sensitization AOP
Joanna Matheson, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Session 4: The Risk Context
Exposure and Dosimetry Considerations for AOPs
John Wambaugh, EPA
Ozone-Induced Lung Inflammation and Injury: From Mechanism to Adversity in Humans
Robert Devlin, EPA
Suspected Modes of Action Affected by Pesticides Exposure: Informing an Adverse Outcomes Pathway (AOP) for Cancer
Michael Alavanja, U.S. National Cancer Institute
Breakout Group 1: The Process of Regulatory Acceptance
Breakout Group Summary Presentation
David Dix, EPA, and Craig Rowlands, The Dow Chemical Company
AOP Development Processes in OECD and Regulatory Agency Acceptance
Working Group of National Coordinators, OECD Test Guidelines Programme
Christine Olinger and Melissa Panger, EPA
How Do We Establish Scientific Confidence in AOPs?
Rick Becker, American Chemistry Council
Regulatory Acceptance: How to Strengthen Protection of Susceptible Populations in AOP Approaches
Ruthann Rudel, Silent Spring Institute
Breakout Group 2: Using AOPs for Regulatory Decisions: Confidence and Criteria
Breakout Group Summary Presentation
Suzanne Fitzpatrick, FDA, and Annie Jarabek, EPA
Contaminants in the Food Supply: How the AOP Concept Can Help Regulators Make Decisions Using Arsenic as a Case Study
Christina Powers, EPA
Decision Analytic Approach to Advance Application of AOPs in Risk Assessment: Characterization Criteria to Establish Confidence
Annie Jarabek, EPA
Using Evidence-Based Toxicology to Evaluate AOPs
Thomas Hartung, Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing, Johns Hopkins University
Breakout Group 3: Taking Qualitative AOPs to the Next (Quantitative) Level
Breakout Group Summary Presentation
Nicole Kleinstreuer, ILS/NICEATM, and Kristie Sullivan, Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
A Quantitative AOP for Skin Sensitization
Gavin Maxwell, Unilever
A Conceptual Model that Enables Quantitative Integration of Data Into an AOP
Catherine Willett, Humane Society of the United States
Applying Semantic and Network Methods in AOP Knowledge
David Wild, University of Indiana School of Informatics and Computing
Presentations by Junior Investigators with Outstanding Poster Abstracts
Quantitative Weight of Evidence Model for Assessing Adverse Outcome Pathways
Dasha Agoulnik, University of Massachusetts Lowell/U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center
Developmental Neurotoxicity of Epigallocatechin Gallate by Interference With beta-1-Integrin Function: A Novel AOP Framework Supporting Neurodevelopmental Toxicity Research and Risk Assessment
Marta Barenys, Liebniz Research Institute of Environmental Medicine
Cross-Species Extrapolation of an Adverse Outcome Pathway for Ecdysteroid Receptor Activation
Carlie LaLone, EPA
Short-Term Atrazine Exposure Alters the Plasma Metabolome of Male C57BL/6 Mice and Disrupts Specific Metabolic Pathways
Zhoumeng Lin, University of Georgia
Hands-On Demonstration/Training
Entering an AOP into the OECD Wiki
Stephen Edwards, EPA
Introduction to Effectopedia
Hristo Aladjov, OECD