Institute for the Environment, Brunel University, Uxbridge, United Kingdom.
Crit Rev Toxicol. 2010 Nov;40(10):845-92. doi: 10.3109/10408444.2010.494250.
In order to minimize risks to human and environmental health, chemical safety assessment programs are being reinforced with toxicity tests more specifically designed for detecting endocrine disrupters. This includes the necessity to detect thyroid-disrupting chemicals, which may operate through a variety of modes of action, and have potential to impair neurological development in humans, with resulting deficits of individual and social potential. Mindful of these concerns, the consensus favors in vivo models for both hazard characterization (testing) and hazard identification (screening) steps, in order to minimize false negatives. Owing to its obligate dependence on thyroid hormones, it has been proposed that amphibian metamorphosis be used as a generalized vertebrate model for thyroid function in screening batteries for detection of thyroid disrupters. However, it seems unlikely that such an assay would ever fully replace in vivo mammalian assays currently being validated for human health risk assessment: in its current form the amphibian metamorphosis screening assay would not provide capacity for reliably detecting other modes of endocrine-disrupting activity. Conversely, several candidate mammalian screening assays appear to offer robust capacity to detect a variety of modes of endocrine-disrupting activity, including thyroid activity. To assess whether omission of an amphibian metamorphosis assay from an in vivo screening battery would generate false negatives, the response of amphibian and mammalian assays to a variety known thyroid disrupters, as reported in peer-reviewed literature or government agency reports, was critically reviewed. Of the chemicals investigated from the literature selected (41), more had been tested in mammalian studies with thyroid-relevant endpoints (32) than in amphibian assays with appropriate windows of exposure and developmental endpoints (27). One chemical (methoxychlor) was reported to exhibit thyroid activity in an appropriate amphibian assay in the absence of corresponding activity in a suitable mammalian assay, whereas none of the chemicals surveyed were reported as thyroid active in mammalian assays but reported as negative in an appropriate amphibian assay. Given the need for one or more in vivo mammalian assays for screening chemicals for detecting (anti-)estrogenic/(anti-)androgenic activity and effects on steroidogenesis, inclusion of an in vivo amphibian assay specifically to detect thyroid disrupters would likely be as an addition to these mammalian assays. As there is little convincing evidence that an amphibian screening assay would detect significant numbers of thyroid-active chemicals not picked up by mammalian assays, the routine use of an amphibian metamorphosis assay at screening level could introduce unnecessary and unjustified redundancy into chemical safety assessment programs, when there is pressure to reduce animal use in toxicity testing.
为了最大限度地降低对人类和环境健康的风险,正在加强化学安全评估计划,增加更专门用于检测内分泌干扰物的毒性测试。这包括检测甲状腺干扰物的必要性,这些化学物质可能通过多种作用模式发挥作用,并有可能损害人类的神经发育,导致个人和社会潜力受损。考虑到这些问题,共识倾向于使用体内模型进行危害特征描述(测试)和危害识别(筛选)步骤,以尽量减少假阴性。由于其对甲状腺激素的强制性依赖,有人提出将两栖动物变态作为一种广义的脊椎动物模型,用于筛选电池检测甲状腺干扰物,以检测甲状腺功能。然而,这种检测方法似乎不太可能完全取代目前正在验证用于人类健康风险评估的体内哺乳动物检测方法:以目前的形式,两栖动物变态筛选检测方法将无法可靠地检测到其他内分泌干扰活动模式。相反,几种候选哺乳动物筛选检测方法似乎具有可靠地检测各种内分泌干扰活动模式的能力,包括甲状腺活性。为了评估从体内筛选电池中省略两栖动物变态检测方法是否会产生假阴性,对同行评议文献或政府机构报告中报告的各种已知甲状腺干扰物对两栖动物和哺乳动物检测方法的反应进行了批判性审查。在所选择的文献中调查的化学物质(41 种)中,有更多的化学物质在具有甲状腺相关终点的哺乳动物研究中进行了测试(32 种),而在具有适当暴露窗和发育终点的两栖动物检测中进行了测试(27 种)。有一种化学物质(甲氧氯)在适当的两栖动物检测中报告具有甲状腺活性,而在适当的哺乳动物检测中没有相应的活性,而在所调查的化学物质中,没有一种被报告为具有甲状腺活性的哺乳动物检测,但在适当的两栖动物检测中被报告为阴性。鉴于需要进行一种或多种体内哺乳动物检测来筛选检测(抗)雌激素/(抗)雄激素活性和对类固醇生成的影响的化学物质,因此,包含专门用于检测甲状腺干扰物的体内两栖动物检测方法可能会增加这些哺乳动物检测方法。由于几乎没有令人信服的证据表明,两栖动物筛选检测方法会检测到哺乳动物检测方法未检测到的大量甲状腺活性化学物质,因此,在减少毒性测试中的动物使用压力的情况下,在筛选水平上常规使用两栖动物变态检测方法可能会给化学安全评估计划带来不必要和不合理的冗余。