Basic Concepts in Toxicology - F
Basic Concepts in Toxicology - F
Basic Concepts in Toxicology - F
Old Definition-
- the basic science of poisons
or the study of the effect of poisons on the function of
living systems
New Definition-
- the study of the adverse effects of chemical agents on
biological systems
so
Toxicology is the study of the adverse effects of xenobiotics on
living systems
History and scope
• Toxicology assimilates knowledge and techniques from
biochemistry, biology, chemistry, genetics, mathematics,
medicine, pharmacology, physiology and physics
- Hazard identification
- Dose Response Assessment
- Exposure Assessment
- Risk Characterization
FACTORS CONSIDERED IN
DETERMINING ACCEPTABLE RISK
- benefits
- availability of substitutes
- anticipated public use
- employment considerations
- economic considerations
- effects on environmental quality
- conservation of natural resources
MAJOR FACTORS THAT
INFLUENCE TOXICITY
-route of administration
-exposure : source, duration and frequency
-dose or concentration
Routes of Exposure
• The route (site) of exposure is an
important determinant of the ultimate dose
—different routes may result in different
rates of absorption.
-intravenous -intradermal
-inhalation -topical
-intraperitoneally -subcutaneous
-intramuscular -oral
Paracelsus—1564
SACRAMENTO, California—A
woman who competed in a radio
station’s contest to see how much
water she could drink without going to
the bathroom died of water
intoxication, the coroner’s office said
Saturday.
• Quantal Dose-response:
At any given dose, an individual in the
population is classified as either a “responder” or
a “non-responder”.
Dose-Response Curves
“The Dose Makes the Poison”
Maximum Response Maximum Response
1.0 1.0
Rate
Approx.
0.5 Linear
0.5 Range
Threshold
EC50
EC50
0 0
0 20 40 60
80 100 0.1 1.0 10 100
Concentration Concentration
Arithmetic Scale Logarithmic Scale
Dose-Response Relationship
“The Dose Makes the Poison”
Effective Dose Lethal Dose
100 100
Animals Sleeping (%)
60 60
ED50 40
LD50
40
20 20
1 2 3 5 7 10 10 20 30 50 100
Phenobarbital (mg/kg) Log Scale
What is Dose?
The amount of chemical entering the body
This is usually given as -
mg of chemical/kg of body weight = mg/kg
response based on the
following assumptions:
1) response increases as
dose increases
2) there is a threshold
dose- a dose below which
there is no effect.
Dose-Response Graphs
1. Frequency-Response
Graphs
2. Cumulative-Response
Graphs
Frequency-Response Graphs
• Dose response to a chemical will likely vary
from one species to the next. Likewise,
response will vary within a group of test
organisms of the same species.
• Intraspecies variation typically follows a normal
Gaussian distribution (Figures 1.1a and 1.1b)
Figure 1.1 (a) & (b)
Population Dose-Response
Many
Number of Individuals
Resistant Sensitive
Individuals Majority of Individuals
Individuals
Average Effect
Minimal Maximal
Effect Effect
Few
Too low:
Too high: Anorexia,
Blindness,
Adverse response
Dose
Cumulative-Response Graphs
Efficacy
Potency
Dose
Using Dose-Response Data
• Lethal Dose (LD) - when the response is death
• Effective Dose (ED) - when the response is a
desirable effect
• Toxic Dose (TD) - when the response is an
undesirable toxicity other than death
• Sentinel Dose (SD) – minimal adverse effects
– Ex. - minor irritation, headache, drowsiness (may serve
as a warning indicator for more serious effects at
greater doses)
• The cumulative response curves reveals doses
that affect a given percentage of the exposed
population.
– Examples: LD50, LD10, LD01
Measures of Toxicity:
The Median Lethal Dose
LD50
The amount (dose) of a chemical which produces
death in 50% of a population of test animals to
which it is administered by any of a variety of
methods
mg/kg
Normally expressed as milligrams of substance
per kilogram of animal body weight
Measures of Toxicity:
The Median Lethal Concentration
LC50
The concentration of a chemical in an environment
(generally air or water) which produces death in
50% of an exposed population of test animals in
a specified time frame
mg/L
Normally expressed as milligrams of substance
per liter of air or water (or as ppm)
Lethal Dose (LD)
• LD50 - is the calculated dose of a substance that is
expected to kill 50 percent of a defined experimental
animal population, as determined from the exposure
to the substance by any route other than inhalation.
- The more potent or toxic the chemical, the lower the
LD50 and the smaller the dose needed to cause death.
TD50 LD50
Therapeutic Index = =
ED50 ED50
Thus, the larger the ratio, the greater the relative safety.
Limitation of TI
The median doses indicate nothing about the slopes of the dose-
response curves for therapeutic and toxic effects.
Does not represent the true data, only animal data.
Therapeutic and Toxic Effects
100
Therapeutic
80 Toxic
60
% Responding
40
20 ED99
TD1 TD50
ED50
0
70 80 90100 200 300
Dose
In this dose-effect plot, the therapeutic and toxic
effects are plotted.
This study illustrates an important principle when a
drug is administered to an organism - there is no
single dose-effect curve relationship that can
adequately characterize the full spectrum of activity of
a drug. All drugs produce at least 2 effects and
therefore have at least 2 quantal dose-response
curves - one for the therapeutic effect and one or
more for the toxic effect.
The safety of a drug depends on the degree of
separation between the doses producing a
therapeutic effect and the doses which produce side
effects, both of which can be characterized by quantal
dose-effect curves.
Therapeutic indices are calculated from dose-
effect curves in order to quantify the relative
safety of a drug.
Using these curves we can calculate a
therapeutic ratio using the TD50 and ED50. The
TD50/ED50 ratio for the drug shown on the
previous graph is about 2.5, which means that
about 2.5 times as much drug will cause a toxic
effect in half the subjects as is needed to
produce a therapeutic effect in the same
proportion of subjects. However this ratio of
toxic to therapeutic dose may not hold across
the entire dose range if the dose-effect curves
are not parallel.
Margins of Safety and Exposure
Way to overcome
One way to overcome this deficiency is to use the ED99 for the desired effect and the
LD1 for the undesired effect. These parameters are used to calculate the margin of
safety:
LD1
Margin of safety =
ED99
For non-drug chemicals, the term margin of safety is an indicator of the magnitude of
the difference between an estimated “exposed dose” to a human population and the
NOAEL (no observable adverse effect level) determined in experimental animals.
TD1 - ED99
Standard Safety Margin = X 100
ED99
Limitation of Dose-Response
• Single values such as LD50 provide no
information about the slope of the dose-response
curve or toxicity at low doses (e.g., LD10 or TD10)
(Fig. 1.6)
• Information most often generated in these studies
is acute toxicity and may not reflect chronic
toxicity dose-response relationships.
– Benzene vs. Toluene – Acute exposure…toluene
more potent CNS depressant; Chronic exposure…
benzene is carcinogenic, toluene is not
• Does animal data mimic human response? Test
species more sensitive or less sensitive than
humans? (See Table 1.6)
Species Differences
• Basal metabolic rates
• Anatomy and Structure
• Physiology and cellular biochemistry
• Distribution of chemicals to certain tissues
• Metabolism, bioactiviation, and detoxification
of the chemical
• The cellular, tissue, or organ response to
actions of the chemical at the biochemical,
cellular, tissue, or organ level
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
• Route of Exposure
– How a substance enters the body determines how
much of it enters (rate of absorption) and which organs
are exposed to the largest concentration of the
substance.
– These variables can have an effect on the rates of
metabolism and excretion
• The amount of chemical that is orally toxic may be more toxic,
or less toxic, when applied to the skin (First-Pass Effect)
– Ingestion - not only eating and drinking - substances
inhaled can be trapped by mucous in the respiratory
tract and brought back up by the Mucociliary Escalator
and swallowed.
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
– Skin Absorption - about 2m2 or 20ft2 of surface area
- absorption dependent on polarity of the
compound, hydration of the skin, number of portals
(hairy or hairless), and physical condition of the skin
– Inhalation - about 70m2 or 700ft2 of surface area for
gas exchange, voluntary response (we must
breathe), effective transfer to the blood by the
alveolus (thin membrane in contact with capillaries)
• Breathing Rate - Average 15 breaths/min, 500-750
ml/breath at rest - Moderate Work (1450 ml/breath), Heavy
Work (2150 ml/breath)
– Injection - IV, IM, IP
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
• Sex (Gender Characteristics)
– On average, females have larger percent of fat in their
total body weight than men
– Women also have different susceptibilities to
reproduction-system disorders or teratogenic effects
– Capacity for metabolism (Ex. male rodents more P450)
• Age
– Young children
• Lower total body weight
• Differences in metabolism and elimination (liver not fully
developed)
• Higher respiration rates
• Different organ susceptibilities (sensitive to CNS depressants)
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
• Age (continued)
– Older People
• Lower total body weight
• Slower metabolism
• Deterioration of liver
• Differences in musculature
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
• Effects of Chemical Interaction
– Additive
• Chemicals with the same toxicity combine to give an additive
effect
– Synergism
• Chemicals with the same toxicity (i.e., same target organ)
that, when combined, cause a greater than additive effect
– Potentiation
• When a chemical that does not produce a specific toxicity
nevertheless increases the toxicity caused by another
chemical
– Antagonism
• Chemical that, when combined, diminish each other’s
measured effect (i.e., one has an antidote effect)
Variables Influencing Dose-Response
Curves
Desired Effects
Nutritive
Blood Organs Therapeutic
Undesired Effects
Toxic
Toxicological evaluation in an
animal model
• With a new substance, the customary
starting point in toxicological evaluation
utilizes lethality as an index.
• Lethality provides an unequivocal measure
of comparison among many substances
whose mechanisms and sites of action are
different.
Toxicological evaluation in an
animal model
• Detailed observation of the intact animal
while it is alive
• Histologic examination of major tissues
and organs for abnormalities after death
Some Chemicals Are Transformed by
the Body (Metabolized) to Aid Excretion
Detoxication
20
Harmful Side Effects
(# of individuals)
15
Slow Metabolizers
10
(elevated plasma levels)
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Drug Concentration (g/mL)
Plasma levels 6 hrs after oral dose
Typical Population
The emerging field of
“Pharmacogenomics” or
“Toxicogenomics” offers
the potential to identify and
protect subsets of people
predisposed to toxicity from
chemicals or drugs
Id
en Less
tif
Identify People with “normal” responses y
Sensitive
ch dif peo
e fe p
se mic ren le w
ns al/ t ith
iti dr
vi ug
ty
More
Sensitive
Tools of Modern Molecular Toxicology:
Genomics and Proteomics
R
+TOF MS: 24 MCA scans from Myo_tryptic.wiff Max. 5191.0 counts.
-COOH
1360.7892
5191
NH2
5000
4500 1606.8892
4000
K -COOH
3500
NH2 In te n s ity , c o u n t s
3000
2500
1938.0629
2000 1815.9397
K -COOH
1378.8696
1500
NH2
1000 2316.3092
1506.9692
1271.6925 1661.8925 1886.0672
500 1001.4584 1983.1071
1589.8688
1343.7703 1798.9216
1071.6147 1959.0339 2298.2643 2505.3460 2602.5045
0
1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200 2400 2600 2800 3000
m/z, amu