Application of Modern Toxicology Approaches for Predicting Acute Toxicity for Chemical Defense

Knowledge Source Identification
Knowledge source name Application of Modern Toxicology Approaches for Predicting Acute Toxicity for Chemical Defense
Owner/Developer National Academy of Sciences
Country United States of America
Languages English
URL http://www.nap.edu/catalog/21775/application-of-modern-toxicology-approaches-for-predicting-acute-toxicity-for-chemical-defense
Description The US Department of Defense (DOD) is faced with an overwhelming task in evaluating chemicals that could potentially pose a threat to its deployed personnel. There are over 84,000 registered chemicals, and testing them with traditional toxicity-testing methods is not feasible in terms of time or money. In recent years, there has been a concerted effort to develop new approaches to toxicity testing that incorporate advances in systems biology, toxicogenomics, bioinformatics, and computational toxicology. Given the advances, DOD asked the National Research Council to determine how DOD could use modern approaches for predicting chemical toxicity in its efforts to prevent debilitating, acute exposures to deployed personnel. This report provides an overall conceptual approach that DOD could use to develop a predictive toxicology system. Application of Modern Toxicology Approaches for Predicting Acute Toxicity for Chemical Defense reviews the current state of computational and high-throughput approaches for predicting acute toxicity and suggests methods for integrating data and predictions. This report concludes with lessons learned from current high-throughput screening programs and suggests some initial steps for DOD investment.
Knowledge Source Category
Category Publication
Sub categories Book / Textbook
Knowledge Dissemination and Sharing
Dissemination channel Website
Targeted audience (specified/objective analysis) Scientists, Regulators
Users access Open access, Fee-based access
Knowledge Characterization
3Rs relevance Replacement, Reduction
Purpose Method development, Documentation and information
Technology/Tools Alternative test methods (in vitro), Non-testing methods (in silico)