Title: A toxicologist looks at Developmental Neurotoxicity Testing
1A toxicologist looks at Developmental
Neurotoxicity Testing - costs and
benefits
David Ray, (an experimental neurotoxicologist) Uni
versity of Nottingham Medical School, Queens
Medical Centre, Nottingham, United Kingdom
2There are many sorts of testing
- To be sure that there is no adverse effect
- But where do we search, and when do we stop
looking? - To characterise an identified adverse effect
- Relatively easy once it has been found
- Nature of the effect may change as dose is
reduced - To establish a safe exposure level (NOAEL)
- Harder for the more variable end points
- Need to be certain that end point is the most
sensitive - Always expensive, as requires many groups
- To understand the mechanism of toxicity
- Requires individually tailored test systems
- Helps greatly with extrapolation to man
3How does developmental neurotoxicity differ from
ordinary neurotoxicity?
- Adult neurotoxicity
- c. 2,000 known chemicals, and as many types of
target cell - most chemicals target a sub-set of less than 10
of these - cell types, and most chemicals target
different sub-sets! - Developmental toxicity is even worse, as new
targets are - seen that are not present in adults (e.g.
migration) - The functional consequences are however similar
to those of adult neurotoxicants, although they
may show up only later in life. - Adverse effects may be subtle
- Normally we solve this by increasing dose until
a robust - effect is seen, but maternal toxicity may
limit scope - Pathology more difficult as usually no cellular
reaction
4What sort of test system should we use?
- One that detects all possible adverse effects
that might be seen in man - The only way to do this is to expose a large
human - population.
- If we have learned one thing from lead, methyl
- mercury, and valproate it is that we really must
stop doing this! - All non-human test systems are a compromise
- so any false negatives put humans at risk
- even a good system that is too costly to apply
to - all candidate chemicals also puts humans at
risk
5An example of a problem with test sensitivity
Schizophrenia in humans usually develops only in
the late teens or early twenties. The mechanism
is not understood, but animal models are of some
value. Would a schizophrenia-like condition
caused by developmental exposure to chemicals be
detectable by the current animal protocols?
The US developmental neurotoxicity testing
protocol requires spontaneous motor activity
monitoring on postnatal days 13, 17, 21, and 60
(2) plus tests of auditory startle habituation
and associative learning around days 21 and day
60. European requirements are similar.
So, are 21 and 60 days old late enough to show up
any schizophrenia-like effects in rats?
61) Effect of 7 day ventral hippocampal lesions on
the locomotor response of rats to challenge doses
of MK-801
at 65 days
at 150 days old
Challenge at 35 days
mg/kg
mg/kg
mg/kg
? sham lesion at 7 days ? lesion at 7 days
Data of Al-Amin,H.A. et al. (2001) Biol
Psychiat.. 49528-539.
i.e. the neonatal damage is not detectable at 35
days, and not fully expressed even at 65 days
old.
7Data of Bhardwaj et al. (2004) Neuropharmacol.
4685-94.
i.e. damage did not change receptor density at 35
days, but did at 56 days of age.
8So, caution!
The lesion-based schizophrenia models suggest
that the final 60 day DNT measure may not be late
enough to be sensitive to delayed effects.
So we may come rather close to finishing our
standard DNT measures too early, but what about
the sensitivity of our tests?
Pharmaceutical companies evaluate
anti-schizophrenic drugs in rats with tests
specifically designed to be difficult, and so
sensitive to subtle changes. Such tests require
far too much time to set up and to evaluate.
9An example of a small effect
Maternal haloperidol at postnatal days 3-6
Spontaneous activity of NMRI mice was
significantly decreased at postnatal day 38 after
4 daily doses of 0.5 mg/kg to the dam.
10that can be clearer with a more focused test
When the same mice were challenged with
apomorphine at day 60 there was a clearer
increase in the stereotypy score (others have
shown similar effects at 0.5 mg/kg x 20 days or
1.5 mg/kg x 4 days)
Thus when the mechanism is known, it is not hard
to find a test that will give a strong positive
result. However, this does not help much when the
mechanism is not known!
11- So what is the way forward?
- For screening
- I have heard of no alternative screening system
that could hope to answer open-ended questions
such as is this substance likely to be without
any sort of adverse action on the developing
mammalian brain? - I know of no human developmental neurotoxicant
would fail to have been flagged up as a potential
problem by a simple screen for adult rat
neurotoxicity at higher dose levels. - I also think that there are none that would not
be detected (at some dose) by current DNT
protocols.
12But theory says we should be careful about using
adult neurotoxicity as a pre-screen
- The developing brain has target processes not
seen in the adult (e.g. neuronal migration, glial
guidance) - Hence there is the possibility that an agent may
be a developmental neurotoxicant yet have no
adverse effect on the adult brain. - However most neurotoxicants have multiple
mechanisms of action, and none have yet been
found that act exclusively on the developing
brain so far! - It may well be that alternative systems could
provide a more secure trigger for in vivo DNT
testing though.
13An unexpected surprise with chlorpyrifos
- Studies by Slotkin at al. have shown that, as
well as inhibiting acetylcholinesterase,
chlorpyrifos reduces cell division (DNA
synthesis) in the brain - The effect occurs both in cholinergic and
non-cholinergic cells - It requires doses that (perhaps coincidentally)
inhibit acetylcholinesterase to a significant but
sub-symptomatic extent, but the effect was
discovered independently - At 1 mg/kg/d over post-natal days 1-4 in rats,
there were marked changes in serotonergic
synaptic markers even out at 5 months old. - Females and males showed very different effects
14 Slotkin Seidler (2005) Dev. Brain Res.
158115-119
15- However
- These findings did not alter the safe threshold
of exposure for chlorpyrifos, and so far DNT
studies have led to only 3 (unspecified)
reductions in regulatory safe exposure limits - Hence the pragmatic response of many overseas
academic toxicologists is that the present system
works well without DNT, and that the EPA scheme
is an over-elaborate waste of money. This is
unreasonable - but not without some truth! - Retrospective evaluation by ILSI of known human
developmental neurotoxicants suggests that
(academic) rodent DNT tests would have identified
them, although not even one chemical causing DNT
in man has been evaluated using the full US EPA
regulatory protocols - and the EPAs animal tests are slow and
expensive.
16- A way forward for better evaluation of identified
developmental neurotoxicants - Current DNT testing uses catch-all methods
that say little about what the mechanism of the
problem is or whether it is relevant to man, and
so do not inform regulatory decisions. - Defined in vitro or other assays are the best
way of answering questions about mechanisms. Thus
new valproate analogues would be far better
screened by an assay for histone deacetylases
Gurvich et al., (2005) FASEB J 199 1166-1168
than by conventional animal DNT studies. - Such studies are quick, humane, efficient, and
exploit the best modern neuroscience. Although
too specific to enable us to say that anything
passing them is safe, they are ideal for
informing extrapolation of ambiguous conventional
test results to man and for prioritising
conventional testing.
17- Problems with the current screening tests
- False positives can be generated by the multiple
measures needed to cover the many sorts of
adverse effects that can be produced, and animals
are wasted in lower dose groups if the higher
dose is negative. - It can be hard to distinguish primary
developmental neurotoxicity from secondary
effects of threshold-level maternal toxicity
because - The brain is reasonably well protected from
malnutrition in utero, but not from disturbance
of placental blood flow or poor nursing - Maternal stress in rats leads to lasting changes
in brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the next
generation
18The effects of maternal stress
Pregnant rats were restrained for 45 minutes a
day from E14 to delivery. Brain-Derived
Neurotrophic Factor message in the progeny was
measured at 90 days old
Fumagalli et al. (2004) Eur. J. Neurosci.
201348-1354
19 We could improve follow ups to standard
developmental neurotoxicology studies by
- Using a simpler initial testing protocol with
fewer dose groups, and only going on to determine
a NOAEL if a (possibly false) positive is seen at
a high dose - Confirming positives and the NOAEL with
individually tailored and interpretable end
points, e.g. pharmacological challenge, as
suggested in vitro determined mechanisms - Using better methods for gross morphology, such
as MRI - Better differentiating developmental delay from
irreversible effects
20Attitudes of academics versus regulators
- Academic
- Emphasis on novelty
- new agent
- new hazard
- new method
- Little toxicokinetics
- Postnatal / adolescent
- Sex differences are interesting
- Emphasis on continued funding!
- Regulator (screener)
- Emphasis on practicality or consistency
- Applicable to multiple agents
- Validated outcomes
- Ideally the same everywhere
- Emphasis on toxicokinetics
- Sex differences are confounders
- Focus on prenatal
- Fixed endpoints
Slightly adapted from Slotkin (2004)
Neurotoxicol. 25631-640
21- The human cost of DNT can be smaller than that of
other developmental factors - In a WHO study of a smelter town in Yugoslavia,
lead exposure and social factors were measured - Together these explained 41-44 of the variance
in overall IQ. The 7-year lead exposure explained
2.8-4.2 of the variance in IQ, and a change in
lifetime blood lead from 10 to 30 micro/dl
corresponded to a decrease of 4.3 IQ points.
However, the IQ/lead association was small
relative to that seen with socio-economic
deprivation. - So DNT is not the only thing that we need to take
action on!
Wasserman et al.(1997) Environ. Health Persp.
105 956-62.
22Conclusions 1/2 (alternative tests)
- DNT is a multimodal process, so tests that
evaluate only a few mechanisms cannot in
themselves avoid false negatives, or the
potential for false reassurance that will harm
human health - Cell-based tests have very limited applicability
to the critical later stages of nervous system
development (where target cell innervation and
neuronal function become important) - although intact lower vertebrates should prove
very useful for this, once their tests are
validated - Any useful screening system must have
bioactivation capacity - Alternative tests often give better mechanistic
information - Any mechanism-based test that gives a positive
result below the level that is adverse (e.g. the
NTE test - with no neuropathy below 70
inhibition) can be challenging for regulators!
23Conclusions 2/2 (animal tests)
- Regulatory animal tests cannot reliably detect
subtle effects although using higher doses can
compensate to some extent - Only components of the EPA tests have been
validated against known human developmental
neurotoxicants, and the full tests involve too
many dose groups - Triggering DNT testing only if there is potential
for adult neurotoxicity is a pragmatic approach,
but would be more reassuring if it was also
triggered by in vitro DNT positives - For chemicals where little basic toxicology is
available, even a fully in vitro test for DNT
would not avoid animal testing for other forms of
toxicity, so it is better to refine and integrate
than to replace - Academics need to understand that regulators are
not backward - but face different, often real
world, problems.
24Disclosures slide Personal interests Consultanc
y ZBL Bioplasma AG Non-personal
interests Funding for pyrethroid research
Bayer, DuPont, Zeneca My thanks to our kind
hosts to Dr. Bala Muhammad for his hard work to
the members of the ILSI developmental
neurotoxicology panel for trying to educate me
about DNT and to the MRC for financial support.