Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
BookletJECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residues Risk Assessment
Section 0. Introduction and outline
2024The use of veterinary drugs in food-producing animals can leave residues that may pose a risk to consumers when they consume animal-derived food products. A rigorous scientific assessment can help mitigate these risks while facilitating the international trade of animal-derived food products.Consult the guidance document on the introduction to the JECFA veterinary drug residue risk assessment process to: • get an overview of the purpose and content of the toolbox; • understand how JECFA interacts with other agencies, participants and stakeholders in the broader veterinary drug residue risk analyses; and• read a Q&A on the Codex Committee on Residues of Veterinary Drugs in Food (CCRVDF) and JECFA.This publication is part of the FAO JECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residue Risk Assessment. The toolbox provides practical guidance on the principles, modalities and technical requirements of JECFA in assessing the risks of veterinary drug residues in food and in recommending MRLs. -
BookletJECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residues Risk Assessment
Section 4.1. JECFA’s approach for assessing dietary exposure to veterinary drug residues: Estimating total residues for use in dietary exposure assessment
2024By this point, you will understand the roles of both the total residue and marker residue depletion studies. Consult the guidance document to: • review how the M:T ratios are calculated in edible tissues at any time point after drug administration; and• see how total residue estimates are calculated based on the marker residue depletion and M:T data. This publication is part of the FAO JECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residue Risk Assessment. The toolbox provides practical guidance on the principles, modalities and technical requirements of JECFA in assessing the risks of veterinary drug residues in food and in recommending MRLs. -
BookletJECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residues Risk Assessment
Section 2. Hazard assessment: How health-based guidance values are derived and used in the JECFA drug residue risk assessment
2024Specific types of toxicological and microbiological data are essential for performing a robust hazard assessment of veterinary drug residues. The International Cooperation on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Veterinary Medicinal Products (VICH) and other agencies provide guidance on the design and analysis of such studies. Consult the guidance document on hazard assessment to learn how JECFA identifies key study outcomes and subsequently derives relevant HBGVs, including the following processes:• Toxicological studies: Determining the no observable adverse effect level (NOAEL) from toxicological studies and selecting an appropriate uncertainty (safety) factor (UF);• Microbiological studies: How minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) data can be used to assess relevant microbiological endpoints, such as disruption of the colonization barrier in the human colon and emergence of antimicrobial resistance; • Derivation of both chronic (acceptable daily intake) and acute (acute reference dose) health-based guidance values, and the difference between these HBGVs.This publication is part of the FAO JECFA Toolbox for Veterinary Drug Residue Risk Assessment. The toolbox provides practical guidance on the principles, modalities and technical requirements of JECFA in assessing the risks of veterinary drug residues in food and in recommending MRLs.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
No results found.