Applicability of organ-on-chip systems in toxicology and pharmacology

Crit Rev Toxicol. 2021 Jul;51(6):540-554. doi: 10.1080/10408444.2021.1953439. Epub 2021 Aug 31.

Abstract

Organ-on-chip (OoC) systems are microfabricated cell culture devices designed to model functional units of human organs by harboring an in vitro generated organ surrogate. In the present study, we reviewed issues and opportunities related to the application of OoC in the safety and efficacy assessment of chemicals and pharmaceuticals, as well as the steps needed to achieve this goal. The relative complexity of OoC over simple in vitro assays provides advantages and disadvantages in the context of compound testing. The broader biological domain of OoC potentially enhances their predictive value, whereas their complexity present issues with throughput, standardization and transferability. Using OoCs for regulatory purposes requires detailed and standardized protocols, providing reproducible results in an interlaboratory setting. The extent to which interlaboratory standardization of OoC is feasible and necessary for regulatory application is a matter of debate. The focus of applying OoCs in safety assessment is currently directed to characterization (the biology represented in the test) and qualification (the performance of the test). To this aim, OoCs are evaluated on a limited scale, especially in the pharmaceutical industry, with restricted sets of reference substances. Given the low throughput of OoC, it is questionable whether formal validation, in which many reference substances are extensively tested in different laboratories, is feasible for OoCs. Rather, initiatives such as open technology platforms, and collaboration between OoC developers and risk assessors may prove an expedient strategy to build confidence in OoCs for application in safety and efficacy assessment.

Keywords: Organ-on-chip; chemicals; efficacy; interlaboratory; open technology; pharmaceuticals; predictive value; qualification; regulatory; risk assessment; safety; standardization; throughput; transferability; validation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Lab-On-A-Chip Devices*