Title: Information requirements under REACH
1European Commission
Enterprise and Industry Directorate-General
- Information requirements under REACH
- Katinka van der Jagt
- DG ENTR / G1 - REACH
- Brussels, 23 October 2006
2WHY REACH?
- Data gaps 86 of HPVCs have less than base set
data - The process takes (too much) time
- Burden of proof on public authorities
- Administrative burden for new chemicals (low
volume) prevents innovation
3REACH Context
- Article 1.1 ..purpose of REACH is to ensure a
high level of protection on HH and ENV as well as
the free circulation of substances on the
internal market while enhancing competitiveness
and innovation.. - Article 25.1.. Testing on vertebrate animals for
the purpose of REACH shall be undertaken only as
a last resort necessary to take measures
limiting duplication of other tests..
4Information requirements under REACH
- General requirements
- Information requirements depending on tonnage
- NB Cumulative
- Flexible with adaptation possibilities
- Adequate justification and documentation needed
5Information requirements under REACH
- Annex VI of REACH proposal
- Annex VII to X
- Minimum information in Technical Dossier depends
on volume - 1 tonne/y Annex VII (20,000 subst)
- 10 tonnes/y Annex VIII
- 100 tonnes/y Annex IX
- 1000 tonnes/y Annex X (2,500 subst)
- Possibilities for waiving
6Intrinsic properties of a chemical
- Phys-chem properties (e.g. solubility, vapour
pressure) - Toxicity properties (e.g. acute toxicity,
irritation, mutagenicity, carcinogenicity) - Fate properties (e.g. (bio)degradation, partition
coefficients) - Ecotoxicity properties (e.g. toxicity to aquatic
or terrestrial organisms)
7Information requirements under REACH
- Specific adaptations for individual endpoints
- column 2
- General adaptations
- Annex XI(1) Testing is not scientifically
necessary - Annex XI(2) Testing is technically not possible
- Annex XI(3) Substance-tailored exposure-driven
testing
8Use of information on intrinsic properties of
substances in a regulatory context
- For Chemical Safety Assessment
- For Classification and Labeling of chemicals
(CL) - For the identification of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative and Toxic (PBT) and very
Persistent very Bioaccumulative (vPvB) substances
9Key considerations
- Promotion of non-animal testing
- REACH article13.1, Guidance note of Annex VI,
Annex VII-X, Annex XI - Alternative information needs to be adequate for
CL and/or RA - Standard information depends on tonnage but can
be adapted
10Annex XI general rules for adaptation
- Testing not scientifically necessary
- Use of existing data (not GLP/ non standard
tests) - Historical Human data
- Weight of evidence
- (Q)SAR
- In vitro methods
- Grouping of substances and read-across approach
11Annex XI general rules for adaptation
- Testing is technically not possible
- Exposure-driven testing
- (only for tests in annex IX and X i.e. 100
tons/year)
12Different types of information
- Exposure information, consider
- Testing may be waived when exposure is controlled
- Experimental animal test
- COM Regulation on adopted test methods (replacing
current Annex V to 67/548/EC) - Other experimental methods (Annex XI)
- In vitro data
- Historical Human data
13Different types of information
- (Quantitative) Structure Activity Relationships
-
- Read-across
-
- Category approaches
14Process for obtaining information
- Collect and evaluate all available information
- Existing test data (in vivo, in vitro) on the
substance - Results of QSAR calculations
- Establishment of (membership of) chemical
category and collection of existing test data and
results of QSARs for members of category - Read-across and application of weight-of-evidence
approach - Cf. Annex XI(1)
-
- NB! Registrant shall be in legitimate possession
of or have permission to use information
15Process for obtaining information
- Consider information needs
- All information that is relevant and available to
the registrant - Annex III options for 1-10 tpa substances
- Tonnage-based requirements incl. specific
adaptation rules, cf. Annexes VII-X - Substance-tailored exposure-driven testing
(general adaptation rules) , cf. Annex XI(3) - Identify information gaps
- Final check for existing information
- Evaluate whether testing is technically possible,
cf. Annex XI(2)
16Process for obtaining information
- Generate new data / propose testing strategy
Endpoints in Annexes VII and VIII - Not requiring use of vertebrate animals, conduct
test - Requiring use of vertebrate animals, assess
whether a suitable in vitro test method is
available and, if possible, conduct in vitro test - Requiring use of vertebrate animals but no
suitable in vitro test method is available,
conduct in vivo test
17Process for obtaining information
- Generate new data / propose testing strategy
Endpoints in Annex IX and X - Not requiring use of vertebrate animals, prepare
testing proposal - Requiring use of vertebrate animals, assess
whether a suitable in vitro test method is
available and, if possible, prepare testing
proposal for in vitro test - Requiring use of vertebrate animals but no
suitable in vitro test method is available,
prepare testing proposal for in vivo test
18Testing proposal
- Annex VII VIII, no
- Registrant should provide data, should consider
whether a suitable in vitro test method is
available, but can conduct in vivo test
19Testing proposal
- Endpoints in Annex IX and X Yes
- Not requiring use of vertebrate animals, ?
testing proposal - Requiring use of vertebrate animals, if a
suitable in vitro test method is available ?
testing proposal for in vitro test - Requiring use of vertebrate animals but no
suitable in vitro test method is available - ? testing proposal for in vivo test
20Testing does not appear scientifically necessary,
cf. Annex XI(1)
- Non-testing methods, general provisions
- Scientific validation
- Results adequate for CL and/or risk assessment
- Adequate and reliable documentation of method
- Grouping
21Testing does not appear scientifically necessary,
cf. Annex XI(1)
- Suitable in vitro test methods
- Fulfil pre-validation criteria (e.g. ECVAM
criteria) - No dangerous property, confirmatory testing
required - Dangerous property risks not adequately
controlled, iterative CSA incl. confirmatory
testing as option - Dangerous property risks adequately controlled,
no further testing
22Testing does not appear scientifically necessary,
cf. Annex XI(1)
- In vitro test methods
- Accepted in vitro test methods
- Scientifically validated, based on
internationally agreed principles - Results are adequate for CL and/or risk
assessment - Adequate and reliable documentation of method
23Substance-tailored exposure-driven testing, cf.
Annex XI(3)
- General adaptation criteria (not endpoint
specific) - Adequate justification is required based on
exposure assessment, cf. Annex I(5) COM to
adopt criteria on adequate justification within
18 after EiF - Specific conditions of use must be communicated
through the supply chain (SDS or article 32)
24CONCLUSION
- Legislative text (Annex XI in particular)
GUIDANCE should limit use of animals and prevent
box-ticking - A paradigm shift is needed from extensive animal
testing to efficient, focussed animal testing - Impetus to refine current in vivo methods, and
further develop non-test and in vitro test
methods to be used in a regulatory context. - Further scientific work (2007 onwards) and
regulatory implementation is needed.