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Wiley

Risk Anal. 1992 Mar;12(1):139-48. doi: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.1992.tb01317.x.

Physiologically based liver modeling and risk assessment.

Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis

P J Robinson

Affiliations

  1. Human and Environmental Safety Division, Miami Valley Laboratories, Procter & Gamble Company, Cincinnati, Ohio 45329.

PMID: 1574613 DOI: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.1992.tb01317.x

Abstract

Because of the inherent complexity of biological systems, there is often a choice between a number of apparently equally applicable physiologically based models to describe uptake and metabolism processes in toxicology or risk assessment. These models may fit the particular data sets of interest equally well, but may give quite different parameter estimates or predictions under different (extrapolated) conditions. Such competing models can be discriminated by a number of methods, including potential refutation by means of strategic experiments, and their ability to suitably incorporate all relevant physiological processes. For illustration, three currently used models for steady-state hepatic elimination--the venous equilibration model, the parallel tube model, and the distributed sinusoidal perfusion model--are reviewed and compared with particular reference to their application in the area of risk assessment. The ability of each of the models to describe and incorporate such physiological processes as protein binding, precursor-metabolite relations and hepatic zones of elimination, capillary recruitment, capillary heterogeneity, and intrahepatic shunting is discussed. Differences between the models in hepatic parameter estimation, extrapolation to different conditions, and interspecies scaling are discussed, and criteria for choosing one model over the others are presented. In this case, the distributed model provides the most general framework for describing physiological processes taking place in the liver, and has so far not been experimentally refuted, as have the other two models. These simpler models may, however, provide useful bounds on parameter estimates and on extrapolations and risk assessments.

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