CADASTER CAse studies on the Development and Application of in-Silico Techniques for Environmental hazard and Risk assessment
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Country: EU Projects
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Start Date:
1/1/2009
Duration: 48
months
Project Type: RTD
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Contract Number: 212668
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Organisation Type:
EC Project |
Topics:
Contaminated land-->Risk assessment-->Tools and procedures Contaminated land-->Risk assessment-->Toxicological information
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Project objectives:
CADASTER aims at providing the practical guidance to integrated risk assessment by carrying out a full hazard and risk assessment for chemicals belonging to four compound classes. A Decision Support System (DSS) will be developed that will be updated on a regular basis in order to accommodate and integrate the alternative methods mentioned above. Operational procedures will be developed, tested, and disseminated that guide a transparent evaluation of four classes of emerging chemicals, explicitly taking account of variability and uncertainty in data and in models. QSAR models will be developed and validated, also externally, according to the OECD principles for the validation of QSAR. The prediction of data for chemicals of the four selected classes, belonging to the applicability domain of the developed models, will be used for hazard and risk assessment, when experimental data are lacking. The main goal is to exemplify the integration of information, models and strategies for carrying out safety-, hazard- and risk assessments for large numbers of substances. Real risk estimates will be delivered according to the basic philosophy of REACH of minimizing animal testing, costs, and time. CADASTER will show how to increase the use of non-testing information for regulatory decision whilst meeting the main challenge of quantifying and reducing uncertainty.
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Project
Summary:
Implementation of REACH requires demonstration of the safe manufacture and use of chemicals. REACH aims to achieve
a proper balance between societal, economic and environmental objectives, and attempts to efficiently use the scarce and
scattered information available on the majority of substances. Thereupon REACH aims to reduce animal testing by
optimized use of in silico and in vitro information on related compounds.The REACH proposals advocate the use of nonanimal
testing methods, but guidance is needed on how these methods should be used. The procedures include alternative
methods such as chemical and biological read-across, in vitro results, in vivo information on analogues, (Q)SARs, and
exposure-based waiving. The concept of Intelligent Testing Strategies for regulatory endpoints has been outlined to
facilitate the assessments. Intensive efforts are needed to translate the concept into a workable, consensually acceptable,
and scientifically sound strategy.CADASTER aims at providing the practical guidance to integrated risk assessment by
carrying out a full hazard and risk assessment for chemicals belonging to four compound classes. A DSS will be developed
that will be updated on a regular basis in order to accommodate and integrate the alternative methods mentioned above.
Operational procedures will be developed, tested, and disseminated that guide a transparent evaluation of four classes of
emerging chemicals, explicitly taking account of variability and uncertainty in data and in models.The main goal is to
exemplify the integration of information, models and strategies for carrying out safety-, hazard- and risk assessments for
large numbers of substances. Real risk estimates will be delivered according to the basic philosophy of REACH of
minimizing animal testing, costs, and time. CADASTER will show how to increase the use of non-testing information for
regulatory decision whilst meeting the main challenge of quantifying and reducing uncertainty.
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Achieved Objectives:
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Product Descriptions:
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Additional Information:
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Project Resources:
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Weblink:
http://www.cadaster.eu/
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Funding Programme(s):
EC FP7: Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development.
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Link to Organisations:
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Submitted by:
Professor Paul Bardos
Who does what?
16/05/2012 15:26:00
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