Abstract

Toxicological hazard and risk assessments for chemicals presently are mainly based on highly standardised protocols for animal experimentation and exposure assessment. In this paper the possibilities are being discussed of developing systems in which the systemic (acute and chronic) toxicity of chemicals can be quantified, without the heavy reliance on animal experiments. On the basis of a chemical's structure, in vitro data on its toxicity, and biokinetic modelling a decision/flow scheme is presented. Key elements are the evaluation of chemical functionalities representing structural alerts for toxic actions, the construction of biokinetic models on the basis of non-animal data (e.g. tissue–blood partition coefficients (PCs), in vitro biotransformation parameters), tests or batteries of tests for determining basal cytotoxicity and more specific tests for evaluating tissue- or organ toxicity. It is concluded that such a flow chart is a useful tool for different steps in the toxicological hazard and risk assessment, especially for those forms of toxicity for which validated in vitro and other non-animal tests have already been developed.

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