Abdulkarim Najjar, Sébastien Grégoire, Beate Nicol, Andreas Natsch, Nazanin Golbamaki, Fanny Boisleve, Amaia Irizar, Brian Wall, Angus Swinscoe, Valérie Masini-Etévé, Kaushal Joshi, Anne Marie Api, Peter Griem, Allison Reis, Nicola J Hewitt, Estefania Cardamone
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Grouping of chemicals has been proposed as a strategy to speed up the screening and identification of potential substances of concern among the broad chemical universe under REACH. Such grouping is usually based on shared structural features and should only be used for the prioritization objectives. However, additional considerations (as well as structural similarity) are needed, e.g., mode of action, metabolic pathways, chemical reaction products and physicochemical properties, when regulatory management measures are considered (such as restriction, harmonized classification and labeling). Guidance documents from the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) recommend considering toxicokinetic information to enhance the robustness of the grouping; however, examples of this approach are lacking. Therefore, this paper shares findings on chemical grouping based on ADME data generated for multiple esters of salicylic acid. These differ with respect to chain length and branching of the alcohol moiety of salicylic acid ester, resulting in a wide range of lipophilicity (LogP 0.21-10.88). Since LogP impacts skin absorption, as well as hydrolysis by carboxylesterases, the bioavailability and thus internal exposure to topically applied salicylate esters can vary considerably. Therefore, we collected skin absorption and metabolism data for 41 salicylates using in vitro testing and in silico models and combined the information to group them according to their potential systemic exposure to the major metabolite, salicylic acid. The results show that, despite a similar general chemical structure, their toxicokinetics vary considerably, indicating the need for better understanding of ADME properties to assess the internal exposure for sound risk assessment.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Toxicology provides up-to-date information on the latest advances in toxicology. The journal places particular emphasis on studies relating to defined effects of chemicals and mechanisms of toxicity, including toxic activities at the molecular level, in humans and experimental animals. Coverage includes new insights into analysis and toxicokinetics and into forensic toxicology. Review articles of general interest to toxicologists are an additional important feature of the journal.