艾姆斯试验
致癌物
生物测定
分析灵敏度
化学
毒理
生物信息学
色谱法
生物
沙门氏菌
生物化学
医学
遗传学
细菌
病理
基因
替代医学
作者
Alejandra Trejo‐Martin,Joel P. Bercu,Andrew Thresher,Rachael E. Tennant,Robert Thomas,Kevin P. Cross,Andreas Czich,Kerstin Waese,John Nicolette,Joel Murray,Paul Sonders,Alison Kondratiuk,Jennifer Cheung,D. Thomas,Anthony Lynch,James Harvey,Susanne Glowienke,Laura Custer,Patricia A. Escobar
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.yrtph.2022.105247
摘要
Under ICH M7, impurities are assessed using the bacterial reverse mutation assay (i.e., Ames test) when predicted positive using in silico methodologies followed by expert review. N-Nitrosamines (NAs) have been of recent concern as impurities in pharmaceuticals, mainly because of their potential to be highly potent mutagenic carcinogens in rodent bioassays. The purpose of this analysis was to determine the sensitivity of the Ames assay to predict the carcinogenic outcome with curated proprietary Vitic (n = 131) and Leadscope (n = 70) databases. NAs were selected if they had corresponding rodent carcinogenicity assays. Overall, the sensitivity/specificity of the Ames assay was 93-97% and 55-86%, respectively. The sensitivity of the Ames assay was not significantly impacted by plate incorporation (84-89%) versus preincubation (82-89%). Sensitivity was not significantly different between use of rat and hamster liver induced S9 (80-93% versus 77-96%). The sensitivity of the Ames is high when using DMSO as a solvent (87-88%). Based on the analysis of these databases, the Ames assay conducted under OECD 471 guidelines is highly sensitive for detecting the carcinogenic hazards of NAs.
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