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Application of Spectro-DPRA, KeratinoSens (TM) and h-CLAT to estimation of the skin sensitization potential of cosmetics ingredients

Cited 9 time in Web of Science Cited 8 time in Scopus
Authors

Cho, Sun-A; Choi, Minseok; Park, Sae-Ra; An, Susun; Park, Jae-Hak

Issue Date
2020-02
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
Citation
Journal of Applied Toxicology, Vol.40 No.2, pp.300-312
Abstract
Ethical issues in animal toxicity testing have led to the search for alternative methods to determine the skin sensitization potential of cosmetic products. The emergence of ethical testing issues has led to the development of many alternative methods that can reliably estimate skin sensitization potentials. However, a single alternative method may not be able to achieve high predictivity due to the complexity of the skin sensitization mechanism. Therefore, several prediction assays, including both in chemico and in vitro test methods, were investigated and integrated based on the skin sensitization adverse outcome pathway. In this study, we evaluated three different integrated approaches to predict a human skin sensitization hazard using data from in vitro assays (KeratinoSens (TM) and human cell line activation test [h-CLAT]), and a newly developed in chemico assay (spectrophotometric direct peptide reactivity assay [Spectro-DPRA]). When the results of the in chemico and in vitro assays were combined, the predictivity of human data increased compared with that of a single assay. The highest predictivity was obtained for the approach in which sensitization potential was determined by Spectro-DPRA followed by final determination using the result of KeratinoSens (TM) and h-CLAT assays (96.3% sensitivity, 87.1% specificity, 86.7% positive predictive value, 96.4% negative predictive value and 91.4% accuracy compared with human data). While further optimization is needed, we believe this integrated approach may provide useful predictive data when determining the human skin sensitization potential of chemicals.
ISSN
0260-437X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/194750
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jat.3904
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  • College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Department of Veterinary Medicine
Research Area Laboratory Animal Medicine, Toxicologic Pathology

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