Perspectives on validation of high-throughput assays supporting 21st century toxicity testing

Main Article Content

Richard Judson , Robert Kavlock, Matthew Martin, David Reif, Keith Houck, Thomas Knudsen, Ann Richard, Raymond R. Tice, Maurice Whelan, Menghang Xia, Ruili Huang, Christopher Austin, George Daston, Thomas Hartung, John R. Fowle III, William Wooge, Weida Tong, David Dix
[show affiliations]

Abstract

In vitro high-throughput screening (HTS) assays are seeing increasing use in toxicity testing. HTS assays can simultaneously test many chemicals but have seen limited use in the regulatory arena, in part because of the need to undergo rigorous, time-consuming formal validation. Here we discuss streamlining the validation process, specifically for prioritization applications. By prioritization, we mean a process in which less complex, less expensive, and faster assays are used to prioritize which chemicals are subjected first to more complex, expensive, and slower guideline assays. Data from the HTS prioritization assays is intended to provide a priori evidence that certain chemicals have the potential to lead to the types of adverse effects that the guideline tests are assessing. The need for such prioritization approaches is driven by the fact that there are tens of thousands of chemicals to which people are exposed, but the yearly throughput of most guideline assays is small in comparison. The streamlined validation process would continue to ensure the reliability and relevance of assays for this application. We discuss the following practical guidelines: (1) follow current validation practice to the extent possible and practical; (2) make increased use of reference compounds to better demonstrate assay reliability and relevance; (3) de-emphasize the need for cross-laboratory testing; and (4) implement a web-based, transparent, and expedited peer review process.

Article Details

How to Cite
Judson, R. (2013) “Perspectives on validation of high-throughput assays supporting 21st century toxicity testing”, ALTEX - Alternatives to animal experimentation, 30(1), pp. 51–66. doi: 10.14573/altex.2013.1.051.
Section
Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>