4.5 Review

Occupational exposure assessment with solid substances: choosing a vehicle for in vitro percutaneous absorption experiments

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 294-316

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10408444.2022.2097052

Keywords

Vehicle-skin interactions; vehicle selection; occupational assessment; skin permeation; skin absorption; barrier integrity; Franz cell

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Percutaneous occupational exposure to industrial toxicants can be assessed using in vitro experiments on excised human or animal skins. The choice of vehicle used to solubilize the toxicants significantly affects the skin permeation process and should be carefully considered.
Percutaneous occupational exposure to industrial toxicants can be assessed in vitro on excised human or animal skins. Numerous factors can significantly influence skin permeation of chemicals and the flux determination. Among them, the vehicle used to solubilize the solid substances is a tricky key step. A realistic surrogate that closely matches the exposure scenario is recommended in first intention. When direct transposition of occupational exposure conditions to in vitro experiments is impossible, it is recommended that the vehicle used does not affect the skin barrier (in particular in terms of structural integrity, composition, or enzymatic activity). Indeed, any such effect could alter the percutaneous absorption of substances in a number of ways, as we will see. Potential effects are described for five monophasic vehicles, including the three most frequently used: water, ethanol, acetone; and two that are more rarely used, but are realistic: artificial sebum and artificial sweat. Finally, we discuss a number of criteria to be verified and the associated tests that should be performed when choosing the most appropriate vehicle, keeping in mind that, in the context of occupational exposure, the scientific quality of the percutaneous absorption data provided, and how they are interpreted, may have long-range consequences. From the narrative review presented, we also identify and discuss important factors to consider in future updates of the OECD guidelines for in vitro skin absorption experiments.

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