一个分级的方法来风险评估微生物组摄动引起的应用美容和个人护理产品

IF 3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Microbial Risk Analysis Pub Date : 2022-04-01 DOI:10.1016/j.mran.2021.100188
Aline Métris, Paul Barrett, Laura Price, Silvia Klamert, Judith Fernandez-Piquer
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在消费品领域,影响人体微生物群的产品的推出迅速增加。虽然越来越多的研究和产品声明关注于操纵微生物组的健康益处,但确保美容和个人护理产品的应用对微生物组的干扰不会对消费者的健康产生潜在的不良后果,在科学文献中却没有得到很好的描述。目前没有就评估对消费者安全可能产生的影响的方法达成一致,也没有定量定义关注的终点。我们提出了一个三层框架来定性评估皮肤和口腔微生物群扰动对消费者健康的潜在影响。该框架是根据毒理学中使用的下一代风险评估原则建立的,并避免使用动物试验。它是通过包括口腔和皮肤微生物组专家、生物信息学家和微生物风险评估员在内的协作协商制定的。第一层是基于“安全使用历史”的概念,其中感兴趣的生物活性物质的功效是根据通常被认为是安全的配方进行基准测试的,因为它们的消费者使用历史很长。在该方法开发过程中确定的一个终点是微生物组的恢复力没有受到损害,即其应对挑战而不进入生态失调的能力。因此,第二层是基于微生物组稳定性及其对短期扰动的弹性的概念。第三层旨在利用下一代测序数据,并将这些数据与健康状况联系起来。虽然16S rRNA数据在确定微生物组中存在的物种方面带来了前所未有的解决方案,但我们在一个案例研究中说明了从这类数据预测消费者健康和疾病的潜在后果所面临的挑战。随着全基因组测序技术的发展和组学数据整合的进步,我们建议微生物组的活性功能而不是分类分类应该成为安全性评估的基础。我们建议一种研究策略来定量地定义潜在的关注终点,基于体外3D组织模型的伴随发展,其中可以评估宿主反应,用计算机方法描述微生物组和纵向人体研究来验证原位学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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A tiered approach to risk assess microbiome perturbations induced by application of beauty and personal care products

In the consumer goods sector, there is a rapid increase in launches of products that affect the human microbiome. Whilst more and more studies and product claims focus on the health benefits of the manipulation of microbiomes, ensuring that perturbations of the microbiome by the application of beauty and personal care products do not have potential unwanted consequences on the health of consumers is less well described in the scientific literature. There is currently no agreement on approaches to assess the possible impacts on consumer safety nor quantitatively defined endpoints of concern. We propose a 3-tier framework to qualitatively assess the potential impact of skin and oral microbiome perturbations on consumer health. The framework is established in accordance with the next generation risk assessment principles used in toxicology and avoids the use of animal testing. It was developed using a collaborative consultation including oral and skin microbiome experts, bioinformaticians and microbiological risk assessors. The first tier is based on a “history of safe use” concept, where the efficacy of a bioactive of interest is benchmarked against formulations generally regarded as safe because of their long history of consumer use. One of the endpoints identified during the development of the approach is that the microbiome's resilience is not compromised, that is its capacity to respond to challenges without going to dysbiosis. Therefore, the second tier is based on the notion of microbiome stability and its resilience to short term perturbations. The third tier aims to utilise next generation sequencing data and relate these to health status. Whilst 16S rRNA data have brought unprecedented resolution in determining the species present in microbiomes, we illustrate the challenges associated with predicting potential consequences for consumer health and disease from this type of data in a case study. With the development of whole genome sequencing technology and progress with integration of -omics data, we propose that the active functions of the microbiome rather than taxonomic classification should be the basis of a safety assessment. We suggest a research strategy to define the potential endpoints of concern quantitatively, based on a concomitant development of in vitro 3D tissue models in which the host response can be assessed, in silico approaches to describe the microbiome and longitudinal human studies to validate learnings in situ.

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来源期刊
Microbial Risk Analysis
Microbial Risk Analysis Medicine-Microbiology (medical)
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
7.10%
发文量
28
审稿时长
52 days
期刊介绍: The journal Microbial Risk Analysis accepts articles dealing with the study of risk analysis applied to microbial hazards. Manuscripts should at least cover any of the components of risk assessment (risk characterization, exposure assessment, etc.), risk management and/or risk communication in any microbiology field (clinical, environmental, food, veterinary, etc.). This journal also accepts article dealing with predictive microbiology, quantitative microbial ecology, mathematical modeling, risk studies applied to microbial ecology, quantitative microbiology for epidemiological studies, statistical methods applied to microbiology, and laws and regulatory policies aimed at lessening the risk of microbial hazards. Work focusing on risk studies of viruses, parasites, microbial toxins, antimicrobial resistant organisms, genetically modified organisms (GMOs), and recombinant DNA products are also acceptable.
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