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Outcome 4 - Capacity building
Supporting best practice through education and training
Actions
- Promote stakeholder understanding of the purpose and components of evaluations through education.
- Use novel validated risk evaluation methods and processes adopted by other regulators.
- Conduct systematic peer reviews of evaluations and peer review exchange for more complex evaluations with international regulators.
Scientific capability
We will build on our strengths and capacity through:
- implementing our science strategy
- adopting peer review processes that ensure scientific integrity
- developing assessment tools and guidance
- engaging in national and international initiatives such as new assessment methodologies (NAMS)
- exchanging information to align with international harmonisation efforts.
New assessment methodologies
Consistent with international practice, we use a combination of methods and data sources to inform our chemical evaluations, and monitor developments in these areas, including:
- quantitative structure activity/use relationships (QSAR/QSUR)
- read-across
- in chemico
- in vitro
- in vivo
- adverse outcome pathways (AOPs)
- -omic technologies.
Learn about the ban on the use of animal data
International and academic engagement
To maintain best practice, we will actively engage with our international counterparts:
- ensuring that our skills and knowledge base keep pace with international developments
- enhancing evaluation findings through data exchange, sharing of training materials and peer review
- using the International Uniform Chemical Information Database (IUCLID) and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) QSAR Toolbox).
We will link with academic institutions to:
- strengthen our engagement with research and develop knowledge about chemicals
- develop new assessment tools and methodologies
- consolidate data
- improve our regulatory capability
- improve opportunities for knowledge transfer
- increase university students’ awareness of regulatory science as a career option.
Maximising use of information by applying chemical informatics!
Chemical informatics is key to supporting the high-throughput and accelerated evaluation of large numbers of chemicals.
What is chemical informatics?
The regulatory application of chemical informatics involves:
- organising
- quality-assuring
- visualising and
- applying large amounts of electronic information to support prioritisation, risk assessment, and recommendations for risk management of chemicals.
Chemical informatics means we can maximise the use and re-use of large amounts of quality assured chemical information to optimise the resources we need to evaluate chemicals. It also helps us complete and publish high-quality chemical evaluations in a timely way. Work to further develop our existing capabilities in chemical informatics will be an essential part of delivering our evaluations.
Next: Leadership and engagement