Determining how thousands of chemicals found
in the environment may be interacting with the genes in your
body to cause disease is becoming easier because of a new
field of science called toxicogenomics. A new report issued
by the National Academies of Sciences (NAS) recognizes the
importance of toxicogenomics in predicting effects on human
health and recommends the integration of toxicogenomics into
regulatory decision making.
Toxicogenomic technologies provide tools to better understand
the mechanisms through which environmental agents initiate and
advance disease processes. They can also provide important information
to help identify individuals that are more susceptible to disease
risks posed by certain environmental agents than the general
population.
"Using toxicogenomic technologies will open the door
for public health decision makers who need to decide in a
timely and accurate manner what chemicals are safe and which
ones are not," says Christopher Portier, Ph.D., Associate
Director, NIEHS and Director, Office of Risk Assessment Research.
The report from the NAS National Research Council (NRC) entitled
"Applications of Toxicogenomic Technologies to Predictive
Toxicology and Risk Assessment" states that the technological
hurdles that could have limited the reproducibility of data
from toxicogenomic technologies have been resolved and recommends
ways for the field to move forward.
"NIH and others have invested in the development of
these tools and have already tackled many of the tough technical
questions. We are now ready to move to the next phase of technology
development, refined standardization and validation, so these
tools can be even more useful to regulatory agencies,"
says Portier.
"The NIEHS and NTP have been steadily increasing the
use of toxicogenomic and other technologies derived from the
molecular biology revolution," said Samuel H. Wilson,
M.D., NIEHS Acting Director. The research and initiatives
supported through the National Center for Toxicogenomics and
the Toxicogenomics Research Consortium, for example, were
at the forefront of these technologies and were leaders in
the development of many of the standards for quality and reproducibility
that are used today.
The report, which was prepared by a panel of 16 scientists
assembled by the NRC, provides a broad overview of the potential
benefits arising from toxicogenomic technologies, describes
challenges regarding use of new technologies, and provides
14 recommendations to achieve the potential benefits of these
technologies.
The NAS report was commissioned by the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) part of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and a leader in the development
of toxicogenomic technologies.