Catch-up validation study of an in vitro skin irritation test method based on an open source reconstructed epidermis (phase I)

Toxicol In Vitro. 2016 Oct:36:238-253. doi: 10.1016/j.tiv.2016.07.007. Epub 2016 Jul 16.

Abstract

We have developed a new in vitro skin irritation test based on an open source reconstructed epidermis (OS-REp) with openly accessible protocols for tissue production and test performance. Due to structural, mechanistic and procedural similarity, a blinded catch-up validation study for skin irritation according to OECD Performance Standards (PS) was conducted in three laboratories to promote regulatory acceptance, with OS-REp models produced at a single production site only. While overall sensitivity and predictive capacity met the PS requirements, overall specificity was only 57%. A thorough analysis of the test results led to the assumption that some of the false-positive classifications could have been evoked by volatile skin-irritating chemicals tested in the same culture plate as the non-irritants falsely predicted as irritants. With GC/MS and biological approaches the cross-contamination effect was confirmed and the experimental set-up adapted accordingly. Retesting of the affected chemicals with the improved experimental set-up and otherwise identical protocol resulted in correct classifications as non-irritants. Taking these re-test results into account, 93% overall sensitivity, 70% specificity and 82% accuracy was achieved, which is in accordance with the OECD PS. A sufficient reliability of the method was indicated by a within-laboratory-reproducibility of 85-95% and a between-laboratory-reproducibility of 90%.

Keywords: Catch-up validation study; Cross-contamination; OECD performance standards; Open source concept; Reconstructed human epidermis; Skin irritation test.

Publication types

  • Validation Study

MeSH terms

  • Animal Testing Alternatives
  • Epidermis / anatomy & histology
  • Epidermis / drug effects*
  • Humans
  • In Vitro Techniques
  • Irritants / toxicity*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Skin Irritancy Tests*

Substances

  • Irritants