PARC Projects

Provide protection against most harmful chemicals
Shift away from animal testing
Improving regulatory readiness of new testing methods
Environment
Health effects
Human health
NGRA
Time span
-
Partners involved
INSERM (FR)
ANSES (FR)
BfR (DE)
RIVM (NL)
Contacts
Gilles Rivière (ANSES)
gilles.riviere [at] anses.fr
Philip Marx-Stoelting (BfR)
Philip.Marx-Stoelting [at] bfr.bund.de
Overview

The project supports the regulatory uptake of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) for toxicological hazard and chemical safety assessment. Currently, most chemical regulations rely on OECD test guideline assays, whose validation follows OECD Guideline 34, now under revision. One of PARC’s central goals is to enable the transition of NAMs from research into regulatory practice, supporting the 3Rs principle (Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement of animal use).

Several NAMs are being developed for complex toxicological endpoints such as non-genotoxic carcinogenicity, metabolic disruption, thyroid disruption, immunotoxicity, and developmental neurotoxicity. Due to the complexity of these endpoints, batteries of complementary NAMs are needed rather than single assays. Some promising NAMs have already been identified within and beyond PARC but require further work to reach regulatory readiness.

This project will identify and support the validation of the most impactful NAMs. The selection methodology will be developed collaboratively with partners and aligned with external initiatives such as EU-NETVAL to ensure synergies. A key part of the project includes expanding the ReadEDTest tool - currently dedicated to endocrine disruption assays - to assess readiness of NAMs targeting other toxicological endpoints.

Another important objective is to organise independent peer review of selected NAMs. These efforts will provide reliable data and methodologies to inform future regulatory decisions, helping to modernise chemical safety assessments in the EU and reduce reliance on animal testing.

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Address chemical pollution in the natural environment
Provide protection against most harmful chemicals
Shift away from animal testing
Biodiversity protection
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening
Environment
Health effects
Human health
Monitoring methods
Risk assessment
NGRA
Mixtures
Human biomonitoring
Workers
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening

Improving regulatory readiness of new testing methods

Time span
-
INSERM (FR)
ANSES (FR)
BfR (DE)
RIVM (NL)
Overview

The project supports the regulatory uptake of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) for toxicological hazard and chemical safety assessment. Currently, most chemical regulations rely on OECD test guideline assays, whose validation follows OECD Guideline 34, now under revision. One of PARC’s central goals is to enable the transition of NAMs from research into regulatory practice, supporting the 3Rs principle (Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement of animal use).

Several NAMs are being developed for complex toxicological endpoints such as non-genotoxic carcinogenicity, metabolic disruption, thyroid disruption, immunotoxicity, and developmental neurotoxicity. Due to the complexity of these endpoints, batteries of complementary NAMs are needed rather than single assays. Some promising NAMs have already been identified within and beyond PARC but require further work to reach regulatory readiness.

This project will identify and support the validation of the most impactful NAMs. The selection methodology will be developed collaboratively with partners and aligned with external initiatives such as EU-NETVAL to ensure synergies. A key part of the project includes expanding the ReadEDTest tool - currently dedicated to endocrine disruption assays - to assess readiness of NAMs targeting other toxicological endpoints.

Another important objective is to organise independent peer review of selected NAMs. These efforts will provide reliable data and methodologies to inform future regulatory decisions, helping to modernise chemical safety assessments in the EU and reduce reliance on animal testing.

Contacts
Gilles Rivière (ANSES)
gilles.riviere [at] anses.fr
Philip Marx-Stoelting (BfR)
Philip.Marx-Stoelting [at] bfr.bund.de
Topics
Provide protection against most harmful chemicals
Shift away from animal testing
Keywords
Environment
Health effects
Human health
NGRA