Envigo reacts on growth in the use of non-animal technologies in pharmaceutical and chemical safety assessment

Envigo reacts on growth in the use of non-animal technologies in pharmaceutical and chemical safety assessment

March 15, 2017 Off By Dino Mustafić

Envigo announced on Wednesday that it will develop and internally validate five to seven ion channel In vitro tests for measuring cardiac risk potential – ahead of the Comprehensive In Vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CiPA) recommendations expected at the end of this year. 

From 2018 onwards, Envigo said it expects to create between five to ten new in vitro and in silico tests on average per year. This demand for such tests is fuelled by changing regulatory environments as well as technological and scientific advancements that are making robust in vitro tests possible. The range of Envigo’s current non-animal technology assays that comply with OECD regulatory guidelines span the fields of genetic toxicology, electrophysiology, metabolism, endocrine disruption, skin sensitization, skin and eye irritation, genomics and gene expression. These tests often form an essential part of integrated approaches for testing and assessment (IATA).

Envigo is also working on defining the non-animal technologies’ regulatory environment, with its scientists currently sitting on various OECD expert working groups. For example, Envigo is represented on OECD local tolerance groups focused on skin and eye irritation tests, technical groups that advise on the development and revision of in vitro test guidelines and guidance documents, as well as the International Council on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for the Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH) group. Moreover, the company has by invitation submitted published validation data directly to the OECD and to the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods (ECVAM).

Brian Burlinson, Principal Scientist at Envigo said: “There has been an exponential growth in the use of non-animal technologies in pharmaceutical and chemical safety assessment. Envigo’s goal is to be the go to non-clinical research organisation for in vitro testing and safety development. Longer term, we are looking to internally develop new tests and or to create them in collaboration with select partners for use across a range of pharmaceutical, agro-chemical and chemical products.”