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Featured researches published by Nancy G. Doerrer.


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.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2006

The Acquisition and Application of Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Excretion (ADME) Data in Agricultural Chemical Safety Assessments

Hugh A. Barton; Timothy P. Pastoor; Karl Baetcke; Janice E. Chambers; Janet J. Diliberto; Nancy G. Doerrer; Jeffrey H. Driver; Charles Hastings; Seshadri Iyengar; Robert I. Krieger; Bernhard Stahl; Charles Timchalk

A proposal 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. Incorporation of pharmacokinetic studies describing absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion is an essential tool for improving the design and interpretation of toxicity studies and their application for safety assessment. A tiered approach is described in which basic pharmacokinetic studies, similar to those for pharmaceuticals, are conducted for regulatory submission. Subsequent tiers provide additional information in an iterative manner, depending on pharmacokinetic properties, toxicity study results, and the intended uses of the compound.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2006

The Use of Biomonitoring Data in Exposure and Human Health Risk Assessments

Richard J. Albertini; Michael G. Bird; Nancy G. Doerrer; Larry L. Needham; Steven H. Robison; Linda Sheldon; Harold Zenick

Biomonitoring uses analytic methods that permit the accurate measurement of low levels of environmental chemicals in human tissues. However, depending on the intended use, biomonitoring, like all exposure tools, may not be a stand-alone exposure assessment tool for some of its environmental public health uses. Although biomonitoring data demonstrate that many environmental chemicals are absorbed in human tissues, uncertainty exists regarding if and at what concentrations many of these chemicals cause adverse health outcomes. Moreover, without exposure pathway information, it is difficult to relate biomonitoring results to sources and routes of exposure and develop effective health risk management strategies. In September 2004, the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and International Council of Chemical Associations co-sponsored the International Biomonitoring Workshop, which explored the processes and information needed for placing biomonitoring data into perspective for risk assessment purposes, with special emphasis on integrating biomarker measurements of exposure, internal dose, and potential health outcome. Scientists from international governments, academia, and industry recommended criteria for applying biomonitoring data for various uses. Six case studies, which are part of this mini-monograph, were examined: inorganic arsenic, methyl eugenol, organophosphorus pesticides, perfluorooctanesulfonate, phthalates, and polybrominated diphenyl ethers. Based on the workshop and follow-up discussions, this overview article summarizes lessons learned, identifies data gaps, outlines research needs, and offers guidance for designing and conducting biomonitoring studies, as well as interpreting biomonitoring data in the context of risk assessment and risk management.


Toxicological Sciences | 2009

Hemangiosarcoma in Rodents: Mode-of-Action Evaluation and Human Relevance

Samuel M. Cohen; Richard D. Storer; Kay A. Criswell; Nancy G. Doerrer; Vicki L. Dellarco; David G. Pegg; Zbigniew Wojcinski; David E. Malarkey; Abigail Jacobs; James E. Klaunig; James A. Swenberg; Jon C. Cook

Although rarely occurring in humans, hemangiosarcomas (HS) have become important in evaluating the potential human risk of several chemicals, including industrial, agricultural, and pharmaceutical agents. Spontaneous HS arise frequently in mice, less commonly in rats, and frequently in numerous breeds of dogs. This review explores knowledge gaps and uncertainties related to the mode of action (MOA) for the induction of HS in rodents, and evaluates the potential relevance for human risk. For genotoxic chemicals (vinyl chloride and thorotrast), significant information is available concerning the MOA. In contrast, numerous chemicals produce HS in rodents by nongenotoxic, proliferative mechanisms. An overall framework is presented, including direct and indirect actions on endothelial cells, paracrine effects in local tissues, activation of bone marrow endothelial precursor cells, and tissue hypoxia. Numerous obstacles are identified in investigations into the MOA for mouse HS and the relevance of the mouse tumors to humans, including lack of identifiable precursor lesions, usually late occurrence of the tumors, and complexities of endothelial biology. This review proposes a working MOA for HS induced by nongenotoxic compounds that can guide future research in this area. Importantly, a common MOA appears to exist for the nongenotoxic induction of HS, where there appears to be a convergence of multiple initiating events (e.g., hemolysis, decreased respiration, adipocyte growth) leading to either dysregulated angiogenesis and/or erythropoiesis that results from hypoxia and macrophage activation. These later events lead to the release of angiogenic growth factors and cytokines that stimulate endothelial cell proliferation, which, if sustained, provide the milieu that can lead to HS formation.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2006

A Tiered Approach to Systemic Toxicity Testing for Agricultural Chemical Safety Assessment

John E. Doe; Alan R. Boobis; Ann M. Blacker; Vicki L. Dellarco; Nancy G. Doerrer; Claire Franklin; Jay I. Goodman; Joel M. Kronenberg; Richard Lewis; Ernest E. McConnell; Thierry Mercier; Angelo Moretto; Canice Nolan; Stephanie Padilla; Whang Phang; Roland Solecki; Lorraine Tilbury; Bennard van Ravenzwaay; Douglas C. Wolf

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 Systemic Toxicity Task Force proposes an approach to systemic toxicity testing as one part of the overall assessment of a compounds potential to cause adverse effects on health. The approach is designed to provide more relevant data for deriving reference doses for shorter time periods of human exposure, and includes fewer studies for deriving longer term reference doses—that is, neither a 12-month dog study nor a mouse carcinogenicity study is recommended. All available data, including toxicokinetics and metabolism data and life stages information, are taken into account. The proposed tiered testing approach has the potential to provide new risk assessment information for shorter human exposure durations while reducing the number of animals used and without compromising the sensitivity of the determination of longer term reference doses.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2014

A 21st century roadmap for human health risk assessment

Timothy P. Pastoor; Ammie N. Bachman; David R. Bell; Samuel M. Cohen; Michael Dellarco; Ian C. Dewhurst; John E. Doe; Nancy G. Doerrer; Michelle R. Embry; Ronald N. Hines; Angelo Moretto; Richard D. Phillips; J. Craig Rowlands; Jennifer Young Tanir; Douglas C. Wolf; Alan R. Boobis

Abstract The Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI)-coordinated Risk Assessment in the 21st Century (RISK21) project was initiated to develop a scientific, transparent, and efficient approach to the evolving world of human health risk assessment, and involved over 120 participants from 12 countries, 15 government institutions, 20 universities, 2 non-governmental organizations, and 12 corporations. This paper provides a brief overview of the tiered RISK21 framework called the roadmap and risk visualization matrix, and articulates the core principles derived by RISK21 participants that guided its development. Subsequent papers describe the roadmap and matrix in greater detail. RISK21 principles include focusing on problem formulation, utilizing existing information, starting with exposure assessment (rather than toxicity), and using a tiered process for data development. Bringing estimates of exposure and toxicity together on a two-dimensional matrix provides a clear rendition of human safety and risk. The value of the roadmap is its capacity to chronicle the stepwise acquisition of scientific information and display it in a clear and concise fashion. Furthermore, the tiered approach and transparent display of information will contribute to greater efficiencies by calling for data only as needed (enough precision to make a decision), thus conserving animals and other resources.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2006

Agricultural chemical safety assessment: A multisector approach to the modernization of human safety requirements.

Neil Carmichael; Hugh A. Barton; Alan R. Boobis; Ralph L. Cooper; Vicki L. Dellarco; Nancy G. Doerrer; Penelope A. Fenner-Crisp; John E. Doe; James C. Lamb; Timothy P. Pastoor

Better understanding of toxicological mechanisms, enhanced testing capabilities, and demands for more sophisticated data for safety and health risk assessment have generated international interest in improving the current testing paradigm for agricultural chemicals. To address this need, the ILSI Health and Environmental Sciences Institute convened a large and diverse group of international experts to develop a credible and viable testing approach that includes scientifically appropriate studies that are necessary without being redundant, and that emphasize toxicological endpoints and exposure durations that are relevant for risk assessment. Benefits of the proposed approach include improved data for risk assessment, greater efficiency, use of fewer animals, and better use of resources. From the outset of this endeavor, it was unanimously agreed that a tiered approach should be designed to incorporate existing knowledge on the chemistry, toxicology, and actual human exposure scenarios of the compound, with integration of studies on metabolism/kinetics, life stages, and systemic toxicities. Three international task forces were charged with designing study types and endpoints on metabolism/ kinetics, life stages, and systemic toxicities to be used in the tiered approach. This tiered testing proposal departs from the current standardized list of hazard studies used by many national authorities, and represents the first comprehensive effort of its kind to scientifically redesign the testing framework for agricultural chemicals.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2014

The use of mode of action information in risk assessment: Quantitative key events/dose-response framework for modeling the dose-response for key events

Ted W. Simon; S. Stoney Simons; R. Julian Preston; Alan R. Boobis; Samuel M. Cohen; Nancy G. Doerrer; Penelope A. Fenner-Crisp; Tami S. Mcmullin; Charlene A. Mcqueen; Craig J. Rowlands

Abstract The HESI RISK21 project formed the Dose-Response/Mode-of-Action Subteam to develop strategies for using all available data (in vitro, in vivo, and in silico) to advance the next-generation of chemical risk assessments. A goal of the Subteam is to enhance the existing Mode of Action/Human Relevance Framework and Key Events/Dose Response Framework (KEDRF) to make the best use of quantitative dose-response and timing information for Key Events (KEs). The resulting Quantitative Key Events/Dose-Response Framework (Q-KEDRF) provides a structured quantitative approach for systematic examination of the dose-response and timing of KEs resulting from a dose of a bioactive agent that causes a potential adverse outcome. Two concepts are described as aids to increasing the understanding of mode of action—Associative Events and Modulating Factors. These concepts are illustrated in two case studies; 1) cholinesterase inhibition by the pesticide chlorpyrifos, which illustrates the necessity of considering quantitative dose-response information when assessing the effect of a Modulating Factor, that is, enzyme polymorphisms in humans, and 2) estrogen-induced uterotrophic responses in rodents, which demonstrate how quantitative dose-response modeling for KE, the understanding of temporal relationships between KEs and a counterfactual examination of hypothesized KEs can determine whether they are Associative Events or true KEs.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2014

Risk assessment in the 21st century: roadmap and matrix.

Michelle R. Embry; Ammie N. Bachman; David R. Bell; Alan R. Boobis; Samuel M. Cohen; Michael Dellarco; Ian C. Dewhurst; Nancy G. Doerrer; Ronald N. Hines; Angelo Moretto; Timothy P. Pastoor; Richard D. Phillips; J. Craig Rowlands; Jennifer Young Tanir; Douglas C. Wolf; John E. Doe

Abstract The RISK21 integrated evaluation strategy is a problem formulation-based exposure-driven risk assessment roadmap that takes advantage of existing information to graphically represent the intersection of exposure and toxicity data on a highly visual matrix. This paper describes in detail the process for using the roadmap and matrix. The purpose of this methodology is to optimize the use of prior information and testing resources (animals, time, facilities, and personnel) to efficiently and transparently reach a risk and/or safety determination. Based on the particular problem, exposure and toxicity data should have sufficient precision to make such a decision. Estimates of exposure and toxicity, bounded by variability and/or uncertainty, are plotted on the X- and Y-axes of the RISK21 matrix, respectively. The resulting intersection is a highly visual representation of estimated risk. Decisions can then be made to increase precision in the exposure or toxicity estimates or declare that the available information is sufficient. RISK21 represents a step forward in the goal to introduce new methodologies into 21st century risk assessment. Indeed, because of its transparent and visual process, RISK21 has the potential to widen the scope of risk communication beyond those with technical expertise.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2011

A proposed framework for assessing risk from less-than-lifetime exposures to carcinogens

Susan P. Felter; Rory B. Conolly; Joel P. Bercu; P. Michael Bolger; Alan R. Boobis; Peter M. J. Bos; Philip Carthew; Nancy G. Doerrer; Jay I. Goodman; Wafa Harrouk; David Kirkland; Serrine S. Lau; G. Craig Llewellyn; R. Julian Preston; Rita Schoeny; A. Robert Schnatter; Angelika Tritscher; Frans Van Velsen; Gary M. Williams

Quantitative methods for estimation of cancer risk have been developed for daily, lifetime human exposures. There are a variety of studies or methodologies available to address less-than-lifetime exposures. However, a common framework for evaluating risk from less-than-lifetime exposures (including short-term and/or intermittent exposures) does not exist, which could result in inconsistencies in risk assessment practice. To address this risk assessment need, a committee of the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) Health and Environmental Sciences Institute conducted a multisector workshop in late 2009 to discuss available literature, different methodologies, and a proposed framework. The proposed framework provides a decision tree and guidance for cancer risk assessments for less-than-lifetime exposures based on current knowledge of mode of action and dose-response. Available data from rodent studies and epidemiological studies involving less-than-lifetime exposures are considered, in addition to statistical approaches described in the literature for evaluating the impact of changing the dose rate and exposure duration for exposure to carcinogens. The decision tree also provides for scenarios in which an assumption of potential carcinogenicity is appropriate (e.g., based on structural alerts or genotoxicity data), but bioassay or other data are lacking from which a chemical-specific cancer potency can be determined. This paper presents an overview of the rationale for the workshop, reviews historical background, describes the proposed framework for assessing less-than-lifetime exposures to potential human carcinogens, and suggests next steps.

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Ronald N. Hines

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Samuel M. Cohen

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Michelle R. Embry

International Life Sciences Institute

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James A. Swenberg

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jay I. Goodman

Michigan State University

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Penelope A. Fenner-Crisp

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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