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Featured researches published by Abby A. Li.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health-part B-critical Reviews | 2010

TOXICITY TESTING IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A VISION AND A STRATEGY

Daniel Krewski; Daniel Acosta; Melvin E. Andersen; Henry A. Anderson; John C. Bailar; Kim Boekelheide; Robert L. Brent; Gail Charnley; Vivian G. Cheung; Sidney Green; Karl T. Kelsey; Nancy I. Kerkvliet; Abby A. Li; Lawrence McCray; Otto Meyer; Reid D. Patterson; William Pennie; Robert A. Scala; Gina Solomon; Martin L. Stephens; James D. Yager; Lauren Zeise

With the release of the landmark report Toxicity Testing in the 21st Century: A Vision and a Strategy, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, in 2007, precipitated a major change in the way toxicity testing is conducted. It envisions increased efficiency in toxicity testing and decreased animal usage by transitioning from current expensive and lengthy in vivo testing with qualitative endpoints to in vitro toxicity pathway assays on human cells or cell lines using robotic high-throughput screening with mechanistic quantitative parameters. Risk assessment in the exposed human population would focus on avoiding significant perturbations in these toxicity pathways. Computational systems biology models would be implemented to determine the dose-response models of perturbations of pathway function. Extrapolation of in vitro results to in vivo human blood and tissue concentrations would be based on pharmacokinetic models for the given exposure condition. This practice would enhance human relevance of test results, and would cover several test agents, compared to traditional toxicological testing strategies. As all the tools that are necessary to implement the vision are currently available or in an advanced stage of development, the key prerequisites to achieving this paradigm shift are a commitment to change in the scientific community, which could be facilitated by a broad discussion of the vision, and obtaining necessary resources to enhance current knowledge of pathway perturbations and pathway assays in humans and to implement computational systems biology models. Implementation of these strategies would result in a new toxicity testing paradigm firmly based on human biology.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2006

A Tiered Approach to Life Stages Testing for Agricultural Chemical Safety Assessment

Ralph L. Cooper; James C. Lamb; Sue M. Barlow; Karin S. Bentley; Angela M. Brady; Nancy G. Doerrer; David L. Eisenbrandt; Penelope A. Fenner-Crisp; Ronald N. Hines; Lorraine Irvine; Carole A. Kimmel; Herman Koëter; Abby A. Li; Susan L. Makris; Larry P. Sheets; Gerrit J. A. Speijers; Karen E. Whitby

Aproposal has been developed by the Agricultural Chemical Safety Assessment (ACSA) Technical Committee of the ILSI Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI) for an improved approach to assessing the safety of crop protection chemicals. The goal is to ensure that studies are scientifically appropriate and necessary without being redundant, and that tests emphasize toxicological endpoints and exposure durations that are relevant for risk assessment. The ACSA Life Stages Task Force proposes a tiered approach to toxicity testing that assesses a compounds potential to cause adverse effects on reproduction, and that assesses the nature and severity of effects during development and adolescence, with consideration of the sensitivity of the elderly. While incorporating many features from current guideline studies, the proposed approach includes a novel rat reproduction and developmental study with enhanced endpoints and a rabbit development study. All available data, including toxicokinetics, ADMEdata, and systemic toxicity information, are considered in the design and interpretation of studies. Compared to existing testing strategies, the proposed approach uses fewer animals, provides information on the young animal, and includes an estimation of human exposure potential for making decisions about the extent of testing required.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2007

Workgroup Report: Incorporating In Vitro Alternative Methods for Developmental Neurotoxicity into International Hazard and Risk Assessment Strategies

Sandra Coecke; Alan M. Goldberg; Sandra Allen; Leonora Buzanska; Gemma Calamandrei; Kevin M. Crofton; Lars Hareng; Thomas Hartung; Holger Knaut; Paul Honegger; Miriam Jacobs; Pamela J. Lein; Abby A. Li; William R. Mundy; D.E. Owen; Steffen Schneider; Ellen K. Silbergeld; Torsten Reum; Tomas Trnovec; Florianne Monnet-Tschudi; Anna Bal-Price

This is the report of the first workshop on Incorporating In Vitro Alternative Methods for Developmental Neurotoxicity (DNT) Testing into International Hazard and Risk Assessment Strategies, held in Ispra, Italy, on 19–21 April 2005. The workshop was hosted by the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods (ECVAM) and jointly organized by ECVAM, the European Chemical Industry Council, and the Johns Hopkins University Center for Alternatives to Animal Testing. The primary aim of the workshop was to identify and catalog potential methods that could be used to assess how data from in vitro alternative methods could help to predict and identify DNT hazards. Working groups focused on two different aspects: a) details on the science available in the field of DNT, including discussions on the models available to capture the critical DNT mechanisms and processes, and b) policy and strategy aspects to assess the integration of alternative methods in a regulatory framework. This report summarizes these discussions and details the recommendations and priorities for future work.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health-part B-critical Reviews | 2013

Pesticide Exposure and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes: Review of the Epidemiologic and Animal Studies

Carol J. Burns; Laura J. McIntosh; Pamela J. Mink; Anne M. Jurek; Abby A. Li

Assessment of whether pesticide exposure is associated with neurodevelopmental outcomes in children can best be addressed with a systematic review of both the human and animal peer-reviewed literature. This review analyzed epidemiologic studies testing the hypothesis that exposure to pesticides during pregnancy and/or early childhood is associated with neurodevelopmental outcomes in children. Studies that directly queried pesticide exposure (e.g., via questionnaire or interview) or measured pesticide or metabolite levels in biological specimens from study participants (e.g., blood, urine, etc.) or their immediate environment (e.g., personal air monitoring, home dust samples, etc.) were eligible for inclusion. Consistency, strength of association, and dose response were key elements of the framework utilized for evaluating epidemiologic studies. As a whole, the epidemiologic studies did not strongly implicate any particular pesticide as being causally related to adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes in infants and children. A few associations were unique for a health outcome and specific pesticide, and alternative hypotheses could not be ruled out. Our survey of the in vivo peer-reviewed published mammalian literature focused on effects of the specific active ingredient of pesticides on functional neurodevelopmental endpoints (i.e., behavior, neuropharmacology and neuropathology). In most cases, effects were noted at dose levels within the same order of magnitude or higher compared to the point of departure used for chronic risk assessments in the United States. Thus, although the published animal studies may have characterized potential neurodevelopmental outcomes using endpoints not required by guideline studies, the effects were generally observed at or above effect levels measured in repeated-dose toxicology studies submitted to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Suggestions for improved exposure assessment in epidemiology studies and more effective and tiered approaches in animal testing are discussed.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2005

Evaluation of epidemiologic and animal data associating pesticides with Parkinson's disease

Abby A. Li; Pamela J. Mink; Laura J. McIntosh; Teta Mj; Brent L. Finley

Exposure to pesticides may be a risk factor for developing Parkinson’s disease (PD). To evaluate the evidence regarding this association in the scientific literature, we examined both analytic epidemiologic studies of PD cases in which exposure to pesticides was queried directly and whole-animal studies for PD-like effects after systemic pesticide exposure. Epidemiologic studies were considered according to study quality parameters, and results were found to be mixed and without consistent exposure-response or pesticide-specific patterns. These epidemiologic studies were limited by a lack of detailed and validated pesticide exposure assessment. In animal studies, no pesticide has yet demonstrated the selective set of clinical and pathologic signs that characterize human PD, particularly at levels relevant to human populations. We conclude that the animal and epidemiologic data reviewed do not provide sufficient evidence to support a causal association between pesticide exposure and PD.


ALTEX-Alternatives to Animal Experimentation | 2012

Advancing the science of developmental neurotoxicity (DNT): Testing for better safety evaluation

Anna Bal-Price; Sandra Coecke; Lucio G. Costa; Kevin M. Crofton; Ellen Fritsche; Alan M. Goldberg; Philippe Grandjean; Pamela J. Lein; Abby A. Li; Roberto Lucchini; William R. Mundy; Stephanie Padilla; Antonio M. Persico; Andrea Seiler; Joachim Kreysa

test Guidelines OPPtS 8706300 on DNt (US ePA, 1998) and in 2007 the Organization for economic Cooperation and Development (OeCD) endorsed a new OeCD DNt test Guideline 426 (OeCD, 2007). these guidelines are largely based on animal studies and are used as higher tiered, triggered tests based on structure activity relationships or evidence of neurotoxicity in standard adult, developmental, or reproduction studies (Makris et al., 2009). experts at the conference stated that these in vivo tests are unsuitable for screening large numbers of chemicals for many reasons including low throughput, high cost, and questions regarding reliability. there was also consensus that new, reliable, and efficient screening and assessment tools are needed for better identification, prioritization, and evaluation of chemicals with the potential to induce developmental neurotoxicity. the information obtained from these screening studies will likely also help to refine animal tests and to inform epidemiological studies.


Neurotoxicology | 2008

Building a scientific framework for studying hormonal effects on behavior and on the development of the sexually dimorphic nervous system.

Abby A. Li; Michael J. Baum; Laura J. McIntosh; Mark Day; Feng Liu; L. Earl Gray

There has been increasing concern that low-dose exposure to hormonally active chemicals disrupts sexual differentiation of the brain and peripheral nervous system. There also has been active drug development research on the therapeutic potential of hormone therapy on behaviors. These different research goals have in common the need to develop reliable animal models to study the effect of hormones on brain function and behaviors that are predictive of effects in humans. This paper summarizes presentations given at the June 2007 11th International Neurotoxicology Association (INA-11) meeting, which addressed these issues. Using a few examples from the bisphenol A neurobehavioral literature for illustrative purposes, Dr. Abby Li discussed some of the methodological issues that should be considered in designing developmental neurobehavioral animal studies so they can be useful for human health risk assessment. Dr. Earl Gray provided an overview of research on the role of androgens and estrogens in the development of the brain and peripheral nervous system and behavior. Based on this scientific foundation, Dr. Gray proposed a rational framework for the study of the effects of developmental exposures to chemicals on the organization of the sexually dimorphic nervous system, including specific recommendations for experimental design and statistical analyses that can increase the utility of the research for regulatory decision-making. Dr. Michael Baum and by Dr. Feng Liu presented basic research on the hormonal mechanisms underlying sexual preference and estrogenic effects of cognition, respectively. These behaviors are among those studied in adult animals following in utero exposure to hormonally active chemicals, to evaluate their potential effects on sexual differentiation of the brain. Understanding of the hormonal mechanisms of these behaviors, and of relevance to humans, is needed to develop biologically plausible hypotheses regarding the potential effects of hormonally active chemicals in humans.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health-part B-critical Reviews | 2012

Evaluation of Epidemiology and Animal Data for Risk Assessment: Chlorpyrifos Developmental Neurobehavioral Outcomes

Abby A. Li; Kimberly A. Lowe; Laura J. McIntosh; Pamela J. Mink

Developmental neurobehavioral outcomes attributed to exposure to chlorpyrifos (CPF) obtained from epidemiologic and animal studies published before June 2010 were reviewed for risk assessment purposes. For epidemiological studies, this review considered (1) overall strength of study design, (2) specificity of CPF exposure biomarkers, (3) potential for bias, and (4) Hill guidelines for causal inference. In the case of animal studies, this review focused on evaluating the consistency of outcomes for developmental neurobehavioral endpoints from in vivo mammalian studies that exposed dams and/or offspring to CPF prior to weaning. Developmental neuropharmacologic and neuropathologic outcomes were also evaluated. Experimental design and methods were examined as part of the weight of evidence. There was insufficient evidence that human developmental exposures to CPF produce adverse neurobehavioral effects in infants and children across different cohort studies that may be relevant to CPF exposure. In animals, few behavioral parameters were affected following gestational exposures to 1 mg/kg-d but were not consistently reported by different laboratories. For postnatal exposures, behavioral effects found in more than one study at 1 mg/kg-d were decreased errors on a radial arm maze in female rats and increased errors in males dosed subcutaneously from postnatal day (PND) 1 to 4. A similar finding was seen in rats exposed orally from PND 1 to 21 with incremental dose levels of 1, 2, and 4 mg/kg-d, but not in rats dosed with constant dose level of 1 mg/kg-d. Neurodevelopmental behavioral, pharmacological, and morphologic effects occurred at doses that produced significant brain or red blood cell acetylcholinesterase inhibition in dams or offspring.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2016

A critical review of neonicotinoid insecticides for developmental neurotoxicity.

Larry P. Sheets; Abby A. Li; Daniel J. Minnema; Richard H. Collier; Moire R. Creek; Richard C. Peffer

Abstract A comprehensive review of published and previously unpublished studies was performed to evaluate the neonicotinoid insecticides for evidence of developmental neurotoxicity (DNT). These insecticides have favorable safety profiles, due to their preferential affinity for nicotinic receptor (nAChR) subtypes in insects, poor penetration of the mammalian blood–brain barrier, and low application rates. Nevertheless, examination of this issue is warranted, due to their insecticidal mode of action and potential exposure with agricultural and residential uses. This review identified in vitro, in vivo, and epidemiology studies in the literature and studies performed in rats in accordance with GLP standards and EPA guidelines with imidacloprid, acetamiprid, thiacloprid, clothianidin, thiamethoxam, and dinotefuran, which are all the neonicotinoids currently registered in major markets. For the guideline-based studies, treatment was administered via the diet or gavage to primiparous female rats at three dose levels, plus a vehicle control (≥20/dose level), from gestation day 0 or 6 to lactation day 21. F1 males and females were evaluated using measures of motor activity, acoustic startle response, cognition, brain morphometry, and neuropathology. The principal effects in F1 animals were associated with decreased body weight (delayed sexual maturation, decreased brain weight, and morphometric measurements) and acute toxicity (decreased activity during exposure) at high doses, without neuropathology or impaired cognition. No common effects were identified among the neonicotinoids that were consistent with DNT or the neurodevelopmental effects associated with nicotine. Findings at high doses were associated with evidence of systemic toxicity, which indicates that these insecticides do not selectively affect the developing nervous system.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health-part B-critical Reviews | 2012

Potential Effects of Chlorpyrifos on Fetal Growth Outcomes: Implications for Risk Assessment

Pamela J. Mink; Carole A. Kimmel; Abby A. Li

Chlorpyrifos (CPF) is one of the most widely used organophosphate insecticides in the United States. By December 2000, nearly all residential uses were voluntarily canceled, so that today, CPF is only used to control insect pests on a variety of crops. Periodic review of the potential effects of CPF on all developmental outcomes is necessary in the United States because the Food Quality Protection Act mandates special consideration of risk assessments for infants and children. This article reviews epidemiologic studies examining the association of potential CPF exposure with growth indices, including birth weight, birth length, and head circumference, and animal studies focusing on related somatic developmental endpoints. It differs from earlier reviews by including an additional cohort study and providing in-depth systematic evaluation of the patterns of association across different studies with respect to specificity of biomarkers for CPF, consistency, dose response, strength of association, temporality, and biological plausibility (Hill 1965), as well as consideration of the potential role of effect modification and bias. The review did not identify any strong associations exhibiting consistent exposure-response patterns that were observed in more than one of the four cohort studies evaluated. In addition, the animal data indicate that developmental effects occur at doses that produce substantial maternal toxicity and red blood cell (RBC) acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibition. Based on consideration of both the epidemiologic and animal data, maternal RBC AChE inhibition is a more sensitive endpoint for risk assessment than somatic developmental effects reviewed in this article.

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Kevin M. Crofton

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Pamela J. Lein

University of California

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William R. Mundy

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Stephanie Padilla

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Sandra Coecke

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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