Schechtman Leonard M
National Center for Toxicological Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
ILAR J. 2002;43 Suppl:S85-94. doi: 10.1093/ilar.43.suppl_1.s85.
Toxicological testing in the current regulatory environment is steeped in a history of using animals to answer questions about the safety of products to which humans are exposed. That history forms the basis for the testing strategies that have evolved to satisfy the needs of the regulatory bodies that render decisions that affect, for the most part, virtually all phases of premarket product development and evaluation and, to a lesser extent, postmarketing surveillance. Only relatively recently have the levels of awareness of, and responsiveness to, animal welfare issues reached current proportions. That paradigm shift, although sluggish, has nevertheless been progressive. New and alternative toxicological methods for hazard evaluation and risk assessment have now been adopted and are being viewed as a means to address those issues in a manner that considers humane treatment of animals yet maintains scientific credibility and preserves the goal of ensuring human safety. To facilitate this transition, regulatory agencies and regulated industry must work together toward improved approaches. They will need assurance that the methods will be reliable and the results comparable with, or better than, those derived from the current classical methods. That confidence will be a function of the scientific validation and resultant acceptance of any given method. In the United States, to fulfill this need, the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Validation of Alternative Methods (ICCVAM) and its operational center, the National Toxicology Program Interagency Center for the Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological Methods (NICEATM), have been constituted as prescribed in federal law. Under this mandate, ICCVAM has developed a process and established criteria for the scientific validation and regulatory acceptance of new and alternative methods. The role of ICCVAM in the validation and acceptance process and the criteria instituted toward that end are described. Also discussed are the participation of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the ICCVAM process and that agency's approach to the application and implementation of ICCVAM-recommended methods.
在当前的监管环境中,毒理学测试深深植根于利用动物来解答有关人类接触产品安全性问题的历史。这段历史构成了测试策略发展的基础,这些策略不断演变,以满足监管机构的需求,这些机构做出的决策在很大程度上影响着上市前产品开发和评估的几乎所有阶段,在较小程度上也影响着上市后监测。只是到了相对较近的时候,对动物福利问题的认识水平和响应程度才达到了当前的程度。这种范式转变虽然缓慢,但却是渐进的。现在已经采用了新的替代毒理学方法进行危害评估和风险评估,并被视为一种解决这些问题的方式,既能考虑对动物的人道对待,又能保持科学可信度并实现确保人类安全的目标。为推动这一转变,监管机构和受监管行业必须共同努力,寻求改进方法。他们需要确保这些方法可靠,其结果与当前经典方法得出的结果相当或更好。这种信心将取决于任何给定方法的科学验证及由此产生的接受度。在美国,为满足这一需求,已按照联邦法律设立了替代方法验证跨部门协调委员会(ICCVAM)及其运营中心——国家毒理学计划替代毒理学方法评估跨部门中心(NICEATM)。根据这一授权,ICCVAM制定了一个流程,并为新的替代方法的科学验证和监管接受确立了标准。描述了ICCVAM在验证和接受过程中的作用以及为此制定的标准。还讨论了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)在ICCVAM流程中的参与情况以及该机构应用和实施ICCVAM推荐方法的方式。