Science Inventory

Immunotoxicology: A brief history, current status and strategies for future immunotoxicity assessment

Citation:

Germolec, D., R. Luebke, A. Rooney, K. Shipkowski, R. Vanderbriel, AND H. van Loveren. Immunotoxicology: A brief history, current status and strategies for future immunotoxicity assessment. Current Opinion in Toxicology. Elsevier BV, AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, 5(1):55-59, (2017). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cotox.2017.08.002

Impact/Purpose:

To provide a brief history and overview of immunotoxicology, the current status of immunotoxicity testing and how immunotoxicity hazard identification is likely to be done in the future

Description:

The discipline of immunotoxicology had its origins in the early 1970s, following the recognition of altered immune function and increased sensitivity to infections and cancers after exposure to environmental chemicals and therapeutic drugs. Reduced resistance to infectious disease was a well-documented consequence of primary and acquired immunodeficiencies, but a novel finding following xenobiotic exposure. The awareness of the consequences of altered immune function was likely heightened by the HIV epidemic, leading some to inappropriately characterize xenobiotic-induced immunosuppression as “chemical AIDS”, although it is now clear that mild to moderate suppression is the most likely outcome of inadvertent exposure. The human health implications of studies in which chemical exposure reduced resistance to infection, drove an early focus on immunosuppression within the toxicology community. Allergic hypersensitivity was well known to clinicians and symptoms were readily apparent, and therefore was not the initial focus of the developing toxicology subspecialty of immunotoxicology. The first review in the field of immunotoxicology was published by Vos in 1977, and, as research expanded during the years that followed, many of the assays, methodologies and approaches that are currently used to identify potential immunotoxicants were developed. Over the years, advances in our understanding of basic immunology have made it clear that allergy, immunosuppression and, in some cases, autoimmunity, are a matter of polarization of the immune response by immunotoxicants, rather than independent outcomes of chemical exposure.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:08/01/2017
Record Last Revised:04/05/2021
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 351270