Bristol D W, Wachsman J T, Greenwell A
Laboratory of Environmental Carcinogenesis and Mutagenesis, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1996 Oct;104 Suppl 5(Suppl 5):1001-10. doi: 10.1289/ehp.96104s51001.
The Predictive-Toxicology Evaluation (PTE) project conducts collaborative experiments that subject the performance of predictive-toxicology (PT) methods to rigorous, objective evaluation in a uniquely informative manner. Sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, it takes advantage of the ongoing testing conducted by the U.S. National Toxicology Program (NTP) to estimate the true error of models that have been applied to make prospective predictions on previously untested, noncongeneric-chemical substances. The PTE project first identifies a group of standardized NTP chemical bioassays either scheduled to be conducted or are ongoing, but not yet complete. The project then announces and advertises the evaluation experiment, disseminates information about the chemical bioassays, and encourages researchers from a wide variety of disciplines to publish their predictions in peer-reviewed journals, using whatever approaches and methods they feel are best. A collection of such papers is published in this Environmental Health Perspectives Supplement, providing readers the opportunity to compare and contrast PT approaches and models, within the context of their prospective application to an actual-use situation. This introduction to this collection of papers on predictive toxicology summarizes the predictions made and the final results obtained for the 44 chemical carcinogenesis bioassays of the first PTE experiment (PTE-1) and presents information that identifies the 30 chemical carcinogenesis bioassays of PTE-2, along with a table of prediction sets that have been published to date. It also provides background about the origin and goals of the PTE project, outlines the special challenge associated with estimating the true error of models that aspire to predict open-system behavior, and summarizes what has been learned to date.
预测毒理学评估(PTE)项目开展合作实验,以独特且信息丰富的方式对预测毒理学(PT)方法的性能进行严格、客观的评估。该项目由美国国立环境健康科学研究所资助,利用美国国家毒理学计划(NTP)正在进行的测试,来估计已应用于对先前未测试的非同类化学物质进行前瞻性预测的模型的真实误差。PTE项目首先确定一组计划进行或正在进行但尚未完成的标准化NTP化学生物测定。然后,该项目宣布并宣传评估实验,传播有关化学生物测定的信息,并鼓励来自各种学科的研究人员使用他们认为最佳的任何方法和途径,在同行评审期刊上发表他们的预测。这组论文发表在本期《环境健康展望》增刊中,为读者提供了在将PT方法和模型前瞻性应用于实际使用情况的背景下,比较和对比它们的机会。这篇关于预测毒理学论文集的引言总结了第一次PTE实验(PTE - 1)的44项化学致癌生物测定所做出的预测和获得的最终结果,并介绍了确定PTE - 2的30项化学致癌生物测定的信息,以及迄今为止已发表的预测集表格。它还提供了PTE项目的起源和目标的背景信息,概述了与估计旨在预测开放系统行为的模型的真实误差相关的特殊挑战,并总结了迄今为止所学到的内容。