Skin sensitisers are substances that can elicit allergic responses following skin contact and the process by which this occurs is described as skin sensitisation. Skin sensitisation is defined as a series of key events, that form an adverse outcome pathway (AOP). Key event three in the AOP is dendritic cell activation that can be modelled by the human Cell Line Activation Test (h-CLAT) and is typified by changes in cell surface markers CD54 and CD86 in dendritic cells. The h-CLAT is accepted at a regulatory level (OECD Test-Guideline (TG)442E) and can be used to assess skin sensitisation potential as part of an integrated approach to testing and assessment (IATA). Stakeholders in the cosmetics and chemical industries have scientific and ethical concerns relating to use of animal derived material and have communicated a strong preference for fully human based in vitro methods. Therefore, we adapted the h-CLAT to animal-product-free conditions and validated the adapted method with the proficiency panel substances in Annex II of TG442E, using 3 independent batches of pooled human serum. The modified method showed equivalence to the validated reference method (VRM), as all proficiency substances were correctly classified. Comparable values for CV75 (concentration yielding 75% cell viability), EC150 and EC200 (concentration yielding RFI of ≥150 for CD86 and ≥200 for CD54) were obtained. Data generated using the adapted method may be used in European REACH submissions, provided the proficiency data is included. We are seeking formal inclusion of the adaptation into TG442E, enabling compliance with global regulations.
nance and growth of the cells used in many of the in vitro TGs. However, some cosmetics companies, including Lush 1 and the Body Shop 2 , have developed policies to avoid all animal generated products, and where in vitro methods are used, there is a preference to use xeno-free materials, sourced solely from humans, in the chemical testing procedures (Xeno-free conditions are defined as those not containing any elements that are not from the same species as the cells used, in this case, human (OECD, 2018a)). In line with a major global trend towards vegan products in the cosmetics industry, a wider interest in avoiding the use of animal-derived products in testing is therefore now emerging.Unnecessary suffering of fetuses in slaughterhouses is addressed at an international level, but consistent practical application and enforcement have been questioned. FBS has been
There is ethical debate over whether fetal calves suffer when their dam is slaughtered and fetal blood extracted by cardiac puncture for fetal bovine serum (FBS) production. Yet, the serum industry does not follow best practice, as recommended by the European Food Standards Agency (EFSA), to avoid fetal distress. We discuss the key elements of this debate, and recommend how the serum industry can alter its practices to improve animal welfare.
The ethical needs and concerns with use and sourcing of human materials, particularly serum, in OECD in vitro test guidelines were explored in a dedicated international workshop held in 2019. The health-related aspects of the donation procedure, including tissue screening, donor health, laboratory work health protection, permission from the donor for commercial use, payment of the donors and the potential for exploitation of low-income populations and data protection of the donors; supply, availability, and competition with clinical needs; traceability of the serum and auditability/GLP needs for the Test Guideline Programme, were examined. Here we provide the recommendations of the workshop with respect to the use of human serum, and potentially other human reagents, specifically with regard to test method development for OECD Test Guideline utility as part of the Mutual Acceptance of Data requirement across all OECD member countries. These include informed donor consent terminology, a checklist of human serum information requirements to be included with the Good Laboratory Practise report, and suitable sources for human serum to ensure waste supplies are used, that can no longer be used for medical purposes, ensuring no competition of supply for essential medical use.
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