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Reduced specificity for the local lymph node assay for lipophilic chemicals: Implications for the validation of new approach methods for skin sensitization

Andreas Natsch, Nicole Kleinstreuer, David Asturiol

2023Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Meaningful and accurate reference data are crucial for the validation of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) in toxicology. For skin sensitization, multiple reference datasets are available including human patch test data, guinea pig data and data from the mouse local lymph node assay (LLNA). When assessed against the LLNA, a reduced sensitivity has been reported for in vitro and in chemico assays for lipophilic chemicals with a LogP ≥3.5, resulting in reliability restrictions within the h-CLAT OECD test guideline. Here we address the question of whether LLNA data are an appropriate reference for chemicals in this physicochemical range. Analysis of LLNA vs human reference data indicates that the false-discovery rate of the LLNA is significantly higher for chemicals with LogP ≥3.5. We present a mechanistic hypothesis whereby irritation caused by testing lipophilic chemicals at high test doses leads to unspecific cell proliferation. The accompanying analysis indicates that for lipophilic chemicals with negative calls in in vitro and in chemico assays, resorting to the LLNA is not necessarily a better option. These results indicate that the validation of NAMs in this particular LogP range should be based on a more holistic evaluation of the reference data and not solely upon LLNA data.

Topics & Concepts

Local lymph node assaySkin sensitizationSensitizationChemistryIn vitro toxicologyChemical compoundPharmacologyComputational biologyToxicologyIn vitroToxicityMedicineImmunologyBiochemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryContact Dermatitis and AllergiesAnimal testing and alternativesImmunotoxicology and immune responses
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