The point of transition on the dose‐effect curve as a reference point in the evaluation of in vitro toxicity data |
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Authors: | Salomon Sand Joakim Ringblom Helen Håkansson Mattias Öberg |
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Affiliation: | 1. National Food Agency, , SE‐751 26 Uppsala, Sweden;2. Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, , SE‐171 77 Stockholm, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Dose‐effect evaluation is an increasingly important step of health risk assessment. The foreseen increase of in vitro methods argues for the development and evaluation of a clearly defined reference points for dose‐effect modelling of in vitro data. In the present study, the traditional use of a concentration corresponding to 10% or 50% of the maximal effect (EC10 or EC50) is compared with a strategy, under which, a reference point (Benchmark dose, BMDT) is calculated that represents the dose where the slope of the dose‐effect curve changes the most (per unit log‐dose) in the low dose region. To illustrate the importance of the reference point, dose‐effect data on CYP1A1 enzyme activity for 30 polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners were evaluated in order to calculate relative potencies, in relation to 2,3,7,8‐TCDD, with confidence intervals (CIs). The present study shows that the interpretation of the results as potency and rank orders potentially depends on the choice and definition of the reference point (BMDT, EC10 or EC50). This is important as potency ranking may be used as a method for screening and prioritization, in research, in policy development or in pharmaceutical development. The use of the BMDT implies a focus on the change of structure in the parameter's dose–response rather than a particular percentage change in the response in such a parameter. In conclusion, the BMDT may be used as an alternative base for evaluation of dose‐effect relationships in vitro. It offers an objective geometrical definition of a reference point in the low‐dose region of the dose‐effect curve. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | polychlorinated biphenyls relative potency dose‐effect curve benchmark dose in vitro |
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