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Zebrafish in toxicity testing
Innovation examples
HealthToxicology

Zebrafish in toxicity testing

Zebrafish are increasingly recognised as a useful model for toxicity testing of chemical substances. Testing strategies are becoming more based on mechanisms of toxicity structured in adverse outcome pathways describing the chain of events leading to toxicity or disease. Using a battery of dedicated in vitro and in silico assays, insight can be gained in how exposure leads to disease. For certain diseases it is known that toxicity relies on the interaction between different organs and cell types, which requires research on whole organisms in addition to simple in vitro models. The zebrafish is considered a valuable whole organism model in a mechanism-based testing strategy. At RIVM, the zebrafish embryo model is used for testing the effect of chemical substances on several adverse outcomes and diseases. For more information see: https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/10.1289/EHP9888; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18136717; www.linkedin.com/in/harm-heusinkveld
03:014 years ago
VHP4Safety project
Projects and initiatives
HealthToxicologyIn vitroIn silico

VHP4Safety project

The safety testing of chemicals and pharmaceuticals traditionally relies on animal studies. However, these raise ethical concerns and often fail to accurately predict human responses. New scientific developments offer opportunities to build a Virtual Human Platform (VHP) for safety assessment, a platform that enables assessment based solely on human physiology and biology, integrating data from in vitro and in silico models. This video explains how we are developing the VHP through an interdisciplinary approach. Read the paper in the videolink or visit or VHP4Safety (https://vhp4safety.nl/) for more information.
03:1614 months ago
Using skin and mucosa models to replace animal testing
Innovation examples
HealthIn vitroOrgan-on-Chip

Using skin and mucosa models to replace animal testing

The skin and mucosa are important tissues that differ between species in health and disease. The group of Sue Gibbs works on the development of advanced in vitro models that mimic these two tissues, specialising in immunity models and organ-on-a-chip technologies. They use skin models to study for example melanoma, skin allergies, eczema, burns and healing wounds. Dental models are used for the safety of materials used in dentistry, for example to test the quality of the implant and false tooth when it comes to attaching to the soft tissue. Their ambition is to expand into the field of multi-organ technology to make even more relevant models for the human skin and mucosa. Click on the link in the video to watch more or read the interview with Sue he[https://vu.nl/en/research/more-about/using-skin-and-mucosa-models-to-replace-animal-testing]re.
00:303 years ago
Daniela Salvatori, TPI Utrecht: We aim for better science with less animals
Expert interviews
HealthEducation

Daniela Salvatori, TPI Utrecht: We aim for better science with less animals

Prof. dr. Daniela Salvatori, chair of TPI Utrecht, presents the aims of the local TPI group and invites all who want to share their ideas or questions on the transition towards animal-free innovations to get in touch via uu.nl/tpi.
02:235 years ago
Helpathon #12 – Can you help Erica?
Questions
HelpathonsPolicyBeginner

Helpathon #12 – Can you help Erica?

We are inviting Dutch-speaking citizens from all walks of life to join a unique Helpathon and help Erica van Oort, coordinator of the Animal-Free Transition Program (TPI) in the Netherlands. No prior knowledge of animal testing is required—your fresh perspective can help Erica communicate more effectively about animal-free research. We strongly believe that well-informed citizens are key to improving democratic policy-making on health research, with and without animals. Please share this invitation to at least one suitable person who could contribute—and of course, you are warmly welcome to join as well.
01:099 months ago
The NAM Navigator: A unique repository for information on the validation and acceptance of New Approach Methodologies
Projects and initiatives
HealthToxicology

The NAM Navigator: A unique repository for information on the validation and acceptance of New Approach Methodologies

The NAM navigator is an innovative knowledge portal to navigate you to and through valuable information on the development, standardization, validation and acceptance of New Approach Methodologies (NAM). The NAM Navigator acts as an online guide that provides specific information needed in each of these steps, thereby increasing the broad use of animal-free innovations. Follow the link in the video to start navigating!
02:1314 months ago
VHP4Safety project
Projects and initiatives
HealthToxicologyIn vitroIn silico

VHP4Safety project

The safety testing of chemicals and pharmaceuticals traditionally relies on animal studies. However, these raise ethical concerns and often fail to accurately predict human responses. New scientific developments offer opportunities to build a Virtual Human Platform (VHP) for safety assessment, a platform that enables assessment based solely on human physiology and biology, integrating data from in vitro and in silico models. This video explains how we are developing the VHP through an interdisciplinary approach. Read the paper in the videolink or visit or VHP4Safety (https://vhp4safety.nl/) for more information.
03:1614 months ago
AI agents for safer science: How AI is Changing Chemical Risk Assessment
Innovation examples
HealthToxicologyIn silico

AI agents for safer science: How AI is Changing Chemical Risk Assessment

This video introduces a novel approach to chemical safety, where intelligent digital agents guided by large language models support scientists in making faster, more transparent decisions. By automating complex workflows and integrating tools like the OECD QSAR Toolbox, these agentic systems help prioritise research, reduce reliance on animal testing, and pave the way for safer, more sustainable innovation.
02:5614 months ago