httk (Q34944)

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High-Throughput Toxicokinetics
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httk
High-Throughput Toxicokinetics

    Statements

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    2.2.2
    20 February 2023
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    1.1
    6 March 2015
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    1.2
    11 May 2015
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    1.3
    14 October 2015
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    1.4
    3 February 2016
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    1.5
    3 March 2017
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    1.6
    8 June 2017
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    1.7
    15 July 2017
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    1.8
    23 January 2018
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    1.9.1
    17 April 2019
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    1.9.2
    25 April 2019
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    1.9
    4 February 2019
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    1.10.0
    12 July 2019
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    1.10.1
    10 September 2019
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    2.0.0
    17 February 2020
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    2.0.1
    2 March 2020
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    2.0.2
    19 July 2020
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    2.0.3
    25 September 2020
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    2.0.4
    10 May 2021
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    2.1.0
    26 March 2022
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    2.2.0
    8 September 2022
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    2.2.1
    24 September 2022
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    2.3.0
    8 December 2023
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    8 December 2023
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    Pre-made models that can be rapidly tailored to various chemicals and species using chemical-specific in vitro data and physiological information. These tools allow incorporation of chemical toxicokinetics ("TK") and in vitro-in vivo extrapolation ("IVIVE") into bioinformatics, as described by Pearce et al. (2017) (<doi:10.18637/jss.v079.i04>). Chemical-specific in vitro data characterizing toxicokinetics have been obtained from relatively high-throughput experiments. The chemical-independent ("generic") physiologically-based ("PBTK") and empirical (for example, one compartment) "TK" models included here can be parameterized with in vitro data or in silico predictions which are provided for thousands of chemicals, multiple exposure routes, and various species. High throughput toxicokinetics ("HTTK") is the combination of in vitro data and generic models. We establish the expected accuracy of HTTK for chemicals without in vivo data through statistical evaluation of HTTK predictions for chemicals where in vivo data do exist. The models are systems of ordinary differential equations that are developed in MCSim and solved using compiled (C-based) code for speed. A Monte Carlo sampler is included for simulating human biological variability (Ring et al., 2017 <doi:10.1016/j.envint.2017.06.004>) and propagating parameter uncertainty (Wambaugh et al., 2019 <doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfz205>). Empirically calibrated methods are included for predicting tissue:plasma partition coefficients and volume of distribution (Pearce et al., 2017 <doi:10.1007/s10928-017-9548-7>). These functions and data provide a set of tools for using IVIVE to convert concentrations from high-throughput screening experiments (for example, Tox21, ToxCast) to real-world exposures via reverse dosimetry (also known as "RTK") (Wetmore et al., 2015 <doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfv171>).
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