Scientific conference on the use of epidemiological findings in regulatory pesticide risk assessment
More than 65 people attended the EFSA scientific conference on the “Use of Epidemiological findings in Regulatory Pesticide Risk Assessment” on November 21st 2017. The conference was the result of an EFSA project intended to set the ground for the use of epidemiological data in the risk assessment of pesticide, as requested by Regulation (EC) 1107/2009.
Speakers and participants from European and non-European countries discussed the two opinions developed by EFSA’s Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues (PPR) and future scenarios where the application of modern methodologies in toxicology, exposure and epidemiology could support a mechanistic shift to the integration of these three disciplines. These scenarios would include the identification of risk factors involved in complex diseases.
The risk assessment of pesticides is a complex task: regulatory toxicity tests do not necessarily address adverse effects suggested by human epidemiological investigations, which in turn may be not focused or sensitive enough to detect significant harmful effects.
- EFSA is therefore proposing the use of the Adverse Outcome Pathway conceptual framework to provide the mechanistic basis for a biological plausible link between a molecular initiating event and an adverse outcome from epidemiological studies.
- EFSA is also proposing an initial framework for the evaluation and integration of epidemiological observations in pesticides risk assessment.
- The discussions focused on current gaps in the proposed approach; in particular, the complexity of performing an adequate exposure assessment was debated.
- A need for guidance to facilitate the risk assessment process was discussed with a consensus that a multidisciplinary approach is needed.
Documents
Programme and presentations
21 November 2017, NH Hotel in Parma, Italy
Time | Topic |
---|---|
8.30 | Opening remarks |
1st session - Chair: Jose Tarazona, EFSA | |
8.40 | Introduction to the “EFSA Epidemiology project” |
9.00 | Scientific Opinion on the investigation into experimental toxicological properties of plant protection products having a potential link to Parkinson’s disease and childhood leukaemia |
09.20 | Applicability of the AOP for assessing causality of observations in epidemiological studies |
09.40 | Scientific Opinion of the PPR Panel on the follow-up of the findings of the External Scientific Report “Literature review of epidemiological studies linking exposure to pesticides and health effects” |
10.00 | The US EPA’s approach to Pesticide Epidemiology: similarities and differences with the EFSA proposal |
10.20 | Integrating epidemiological data in hazard identification |
10.40 | The AOP conceptual framework as a tool to support biological plausibility of epidemiological studies. Practical example: inhibition of the mitochondrial complex I of nigrostriatal neurons leading to Parkinson motor deficits. |
11.00 | Coffee break |
2nd session - Chair: Christine Müller-Graf, BfR | |
11.30 | The Agricultural Health Study (AHS) |
11.50 | Exposure data in environmental epidemiology: limitations and quality assessments |
12.10 | Pesticide exposure assessment in epidemiological studies. Current issues and future perspective |
12.30 | Contribution of vigilance data to the risk assessment of pesticides |
12.40 | Critical review of EFSA proposal and ways to implement the use of epidemiology in pesticide risk assessment |
13.00 | Lunch |
Afternoon session - Chair:Jose Tarazona, EFSA | |
14.00 | Perspectives on environmental epidemiology |
14.20 | Considerations on the approach proposed by EFSA |
14.40 | Open discussion |
16.20 | Concluding remarks |
16.30 | End of the Scientific Conference |