scholarly journals A ready-to-use online tool to calculate the BCF of active substances: MOSAIC bioacc

Author(s):  
Aude Ratier ◽  
Christelle Lopes ◽  
Gauthier Multari ◽  
Marc Babut ◽  
Vanessa Mazerolles ◽  
...  

Toxicokinetic/toxicodynamic (TKTD) models are used to describe and predict the toxicity and the effects of chemical substances on individual traits based on experimental data. The toxicokinetic (TK) part describes the relationship between the exposure medium and the organism, considering various processes such as ADME (accumulation, depuration, metabolization and excretion). Regulation laying down the data requirements for active substances for the placing of plant protection products on the market, a bioaccumulation study on fish is required for substances with a partition coefficient octanol / water greater than or equal to 3, following the OECD guideline 305. Such a TK test allows to define the bioconcentration factor (BCF), the biomagnification factor (BMF) or the bioaccumulation factor (BAF). These factors are decisive criteria for estimating the concentration of active substances present in food items of vertebrates and more particularly of piscivorous birds and mammals. In a recent study, a relevant inference framework (Bayesian inference) was proposed to estimate toxicokinetic model parameters accounting for their correlation, based on the experimental data from standard guidelines and leading to the calculation of BCF/BMF/BAF. Models underlying this framework can be directly integrated and used as TK parts of TKTD models. Achieved in agreement with EFSA's scientific opinion on good modeling practices, the objective of this project is to develop a ready-to-use on-line tool for easily estimating BCF/BMF/BAF in a regulatory framework, by taking into account bioaccumulation of a parent compound and its metabolites through biotransformation. We built a Shiny interface to make available the inference method and the BCF/BMF/BAF calculation from the MOSAIC platform, which may be used for research as well as by companies or regulatory agencies. This tool will be integrated more broadly into the development and widespread use of TKTD models within the risk assessment framework.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aude Ratier ◽  
Christelle Lopes ◽  
Gauthier Multari ◽  
Vanessa Mazerolles ◽  
Patrice Carpentier ◽  
...  

AbstractToday, there are no ready-to-use convenient tools in ecotoxicology to diagnose and predict the accumulation and effects of chemical substances on living organisms, accounting for exposure situations that are known to be complex (routes of exposure, metabolization processes, cocktail effects, etc.). Regarding plant protection products in marketing authorization applications, regulation No 283/2013 (EU) defines the data requirements for active substances with a bioaccumulation test on fish according to OECD Test guideline 305. This paper presents new perspectives on the estimation of the bioaccumulation factors via an innovative ready-to-use web tool providing these factors, associated with their uncertainty to facilitate the daily work of regulators, but also of any user, by benefiting of a freely available and user-friendly on-line interface avoiding to invest into underlying mathematical and statistical technicalities. This tool, MOSAICbioacc, is available at https://mosaic.univ-lyon1.fr/bioacc, and can be used by any environmental scientists, ecotoxicologists or managers when accumulation-depuration data are collected and need to be easily and quickly analysed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 350 ◽  
pp. S237
Author(s):  
M. Karaca ◽  
B. Fischer ◽  
C.T. Willenbockel ◽  
P. Marx-Stoelting ◽  
D. Bloch

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rositsa Serafimova ◽  
Tamara Coja ◽  
George E. N. Kass

The safety assessment of chemicals added or found in food has traditionally made use of data from in vivo studies performed on experimental animals. The nature and amount of data required to carry out a risk assessment is generally stipulated either in the different food legislations or in sectoral guidance documents. However, there are still cases where no or only limited experimental data are available or not specified by law, for example for contaminants or for some minor metabolites from active substances in plant protection products. For such cases, the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) can be applied. This review explores the use of the TTC approach in food safety in the European Union, in relation to the different food sectors, legal requirements and future opportunities.


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