Med Lav
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This article aims to discuss the influence that the application of the recent discoveries in genomics will have on the theory and practice of industrial toxicology in developed post-industrial countries. It is stressed that the recent advances in toxicogenomics can be integrated into the existing wealth of knowledge on the toxic properties of industrial chemicals to improve the efficacy of prevention of toxicological risk. ⋯ A closer integration between industrial toxicology and state-of-the-art molecular genetics derived from the recent sequencing of the human genome is the way to overcome the limitations described. In particular, the individual subjects in the examined populations can be classified with regard to some genetically controlled characters relevant to the biotransformation of xenobiotics and to DNA repair and the statistical analysis of data can be performed on more homogeneous subpopulations, in order to decrease inter-individual variability of biochemical and physiological response. This in turn increases the predictive power of the biological markers, both of dose and effect, and improves the efficacy of prevention, e.g., by highlighting oversensitive subpopulations or lifestyles which can increase the risk of occupational and environmental disease.
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Low-dose exposures to mixtures of substances have received increasing interest and they involve many different occupational and environmental situations. The presence in the population (working and general) of groups of susceptible individuals is an important public health issue that poses new challenges to science and society. ⋯ The challenge in this field for the coming years appears to be not the analytical but the medical and ethical implications.