National Toxicology Program (NTP); Office of Liaison, Policy and Review; Meeting of the NTP Board of Scientific Counselors, 57358-57360 [E8-23181]
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57358
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 192 / Thursday, October 2, 2008 / Notices
the office of the Board of Governors.
Interested persons may express their
views in writing to the Reserve Bank
indicated for that notice or to the offices
of the Board of Governors. Comments
must be received not later than October
17, 2008.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
(Burl Thornton, Assistant Vice
President) 230 South LaSalle Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60690–1414:
1. Peter T. Rogers, Appleton,
Wisconsin, to retain voting shares of
M.S.B. Bancorporation, Inc., and
thereby indirectly retain voting shares of
Premier Community Bank, Marion,
Wisconsin.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, September 29, 2008.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–23218 Filed 10–1–08; 8:45 am]
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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Consumer Advisory Council; Notice of
Meeting of the Consumer Advisory
Council
The Consumer Advisory Council will
meet on Thursday, October 23, 2008.
The meeting, which will be open to
public observation, will take place at the
Federal Reserve Board’s offices in
Washington, DC, in Dining Room E on
the Terrace Level of the Martin
Building. Anyone planning to attend the
meeting should, for security purposes,
register no later than Tuesday, October
21, by completing the form found on
line at: https://www.federalreserve.gov/
secure/forms/cacregistration.cfm.
Additionally, attendees must present
photo identification to enter the
building.
The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. and
is expected to conclude at 1 p.m. The
Martin Building is located on C Street,
NW., between 20th and 21st Streets.
The Council’s function is to advise
the Board on the exercise of the Board’s
responsibilities under various consumer
financial services laws and on other
matters on which the Board seeks its
advice. Time permitting, the Council
will discuss the following topics:
• Housing and Economic Reco very
Act of 2008: Members will discuss
various initiatives included in the
legislation, such as the new Federal
Housing Administration ‘‘HOPE for
Homeowners’’ refinancing program and
the provision of $4 billion in block grant
funds for the redevelopment of
abandoned and foreclosed homes
• Proposed rules regarding credit
cards and overdraft services: Members
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will discuss issues raised in the public
comments received on the Board’s
proposed rules prohibiting unfair or
deceptive acts or practices in
connection with credit card accounts
and overdraft services for deposit
accounts.
• Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA): Members will discuss key
findings from the 2007 HMDA data.
Reports by committees and other
matters initiated by Council members
also may be discussed.
Persons wishing to submit views to
the Council on any of the above topics
may do so by sending written
statements to Jennifer Kerslake,
Secretary of the Consumer Advisory
Council, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System,
Washington, DC 20551. Information
about this meeting may be obtained
from Ms. Kerslake, 202–452–6470.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, September 29, 2008.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–23241 Filed 10–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Toxicology Program (NTP);
Office of Liaison, Policy and Review;
Meeting of the NTP Board of Scientific
Counselors
National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS), National Institutes of Health.
ACTION: Meeting announcement and
request for comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to Public Law 92–
463, notice is hereby given of a meeting
of the NTP Board of Scientific
Counselors (NTP BSC). The NTP BSC is
a federally chartered, external advisory
group composed of scientists from the
public and private sectors that provides
primary scientific oversight to the NTP
Director and evaluates the scientific
merit of the NTP’s intramural and
collaborative programs.
DATES: The NTP BSC meeting will be
held on November 20–21, 2008. The
deadline for submission of written
comments is November 6, 2008, and for
pre-registration to attend the meeting,
including registering to present oral
comments, is November 13, 2008.
Persons needing interpreting services in
order to attend should contact 301–402–
8180 (voice) or 301–435–1908 (TTY).
For other accommodations while on the
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
NIEHS campus, contact 919–541–2475
or e-mail niehsoeeo@niehs.nih.gov.
Requests should be made at least 7 days
in advance of the event.
ADDRESSES: The NTP BSC meeting will
be held in the Rodbell Auditorium, Rall
Building at the NIEHS, 111 T.W.
Alexander Drive, Research Triangle
Park, NC 27709. Public comments on all
agenda topics and any other
correspondence should be submitted to
Dr. Barbara Shane, Executive Secretary
for the NTP BSC, NTP Office of Liaison,
Policy and Review, NIEHS, P.O. Box
12233, MD A3–01, Research Triangle
Park, NC 27709; telephone: 919–541–
4253; fax: 919–541–0295; or e-mail:
shane@niehs.nih.gov. Courier address:
NIEHS, 111 T.W. Alexander Drive,
Room A322, Research Triangle Park, NC
27709.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Barbara Shane (telephone: 919–541–
4253 or e-mail: shane@niehs.nih.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Preliminary Agenda Topics and
Availability of Meeting Materials
November 20–21, 2008
• Update of NTP activities
• NTP testing program: nominations
and proposed research projects on
bisphenol AF, dimethylamine borane,
ethylene glycol 2-ethylhexyl ether,
hydroxyurea, L-betamethylaminoalanine, and triclosan
• BSC working group report on
criteria for evaluating outcomes in
immunotoxicology studies
• BSC working group report on
criteria for evaluating outcomes in
reproductive toxicology studies
• BSC working group report on
criteria for evaluating outcomes in
developmental toxicology studies
• Toxicology of DNA-based therapies
• Concept review: production of mold
materials
• Sources of variability in NTP
toxicogenomic studies
• Update on the High Throughput
Screening Initiative
The preliminary agenda, roster of NTP
BSC members and ad hoc reviewers,
draft NTP research concepts, public
comments, and any additional
information, when available, will be
posted on the NTP BSC meeting Web
site (https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165) or
may be requested in hardcopy from the
Executive Secretary for the NTP BSC
(see ADDRESSES above). Updates to the
agenda will also be posted to this site.
Following the meeting, summary
minutes will be prepared and made
available on the NTP meeting Web site.
E:\FR\FM\02OCN1.SGM
02OCN1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 192 / Thursday, October 2, 2008 / Notices
NTP Testing Program: Nominations and
Proposed Research Projects
The NTP actively seeks to identify
and select for study chemicals and other
substances for which sufficient
information is not available to
adequately evaluate potential human
health hazards. The NTP accomplishes
this goal through a formal open
nomination and selection process.
Substances considered appropriate for
study generally fall into two broad, yet
overlapping categories: (1) Substances
judged to have high concern as possible
public health hazards based on the
extent of human exposure and/or
suspicion of toxicity and (2) substances
for which toxicological data gaps exist
and additional studies would aid in
assessing potential human health risks,
e.g., by facilitating cross-species
extrapolation or evaluating doseresponse relationships. Nominations are
subject to a multi-step, formal process of
review before selections for testing are
made and toxicological studies are
designed and implemented. The
nomination review and selection
process is accomplished through the
participation of representatives from the
NIEHS, other federal agencies
represented on the Interagency
Committee for Chemical Evaluation and
Coordination (ICCEC), the NTP BSC, the
NTP Executive Committee—the NTP
federal interagency policy body, and the
public. The nomination review and
selection process is described in further
detail on the NTP Web site (https://
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/, select ‘‘Nominations
to the Testing Program’’).
Table 1 lists new nominations to be
reviewed at the NTP BSC meeting.
Background documents for each
nomination are available on the NTP
Web site at https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/
nom. The NTP invites interested parties
to submit written comments, provide
supplementary information, or present
oral comments at the NTP BSC meeting
on the nominated substances and
preliminary study recommendations
(see ‘‘Request for Comments’’ below).
57359
The NTP welcomes toxicology study
information from completed, ongoing,
or anticipated studies, as well as
information on current U.S. production
levels, use or consumption patterns,
human exposure, environmental
occurrence, or public health concerns
for any of the nominated substances.
The NTP is interested in identifying
appropriate animal and non-animal
experimental models for mechanisticbased research, including genetically
modified rodents and high-throughput
in vitro test methods, and as such,
solicits comments regarding the use of
specific in vivo and in vitro
experimental approaches to address
questions relevant to the nominated
substances and issues under
consideration. Although the deadline
for submission of written comments to
be considered at the NTP BSC meeting
is November 6, 2008 (see ‘‘Request for
Comments’’ below), the NTP welcomes
comments or additional information on
these study nominations at any time.
TABLE 1—TESTING RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SUBSTANCES NOMINATED TO THE NTP FOR TOXICOLOGICAL STUDIES
Preliminary study
recommendations 2
Nominated by 1
Nomination rationale
Bisphenol AF [1478–61–1] ............
NIEHS ...........................................
Dimethylamine borane [74–94–2] ..
National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health.
Ethylene glycol 2-ethylhexyl ether
[1559–35–9].
NIEHS ...........................................
Hydroxyurea [127–07–1] ...............
NIEHS and Private Individual .......
L-beta-Methylaminoalanine
[15920–93–1].
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Substance [CAS No.]
NIEHS ...........................................
Moderate production and use in
polymer synthesis; short-term
studies suggest potential for endocrine disruption and adverse
reproductive effects; lack of
adequate toxicity data.
Possible contact sensitizer and
systemic toxicant but insufficient evidence as determined
by the NIOSH Dermal Subject
Matter Expert Workgroup.
High production volume; potential
worker exposures; suspicion of
toxicity based on chemical
structure; lack of adequate toxicity data.
Long-term safety concern when
used as therapy for sickle cell
anemia; NTP Center for the
Evaluation of Risks to Human
Reproduction (CERHR) Expert
Panel identified a critical data
need for multi-generational experimental animal studies to assess the long-term effects of
prenatal and postnatal exposures on postnatal development
including
developmental
neurotoxicity, reproductive function, and carcinogenicity.
Natural product produced by
cyanobacteria with localized
and potentially widespread environmental occurrence; suspected risk factor for neurological disease(s); lack of adequate toxicity data.
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E:\FR\FM\02OCN1.SGM
—Comprehensive
characterization.
toxicological
—Dermal absorption studies.
—Skin sensitization studies.
—Subchronic dermal toxicity studies with neurotoxicity and behavioral assessments.
—Reproductive
and
developmental toxicity studies.
No experimental animal toxicity
studies at this time; human
studies currently being considered by the NIH and other federal agencies may address outstanding safety concerns.
—Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination studies.
—Neurotoxicity studies.
—Biomolecular screening studies.
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57360
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 192 / Thursday, October 2, 2008 / Notices
TABLE 1—TESTING RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SUBSTANCES NOMINATED TO THE NTP FOR TOXICOLOGICAL STUDIES—
Continued
Substance [CAS No.]
Nominated by 1
Nomination rationale
Preliminary study
recommendations 2
Triclosan [3380–34–5] ...................
Private Individual and U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
Widespread use in consumer
products; frequent and longterm exposure for all age
groups; lack of adequate toxicity data for dermal exposures.
—Carcinogenicity studies via dermal administration.
—Phototoxicity studies.
—Reproductive toxicity studies.
1 National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS).
term ‘‘comprehensive toxicological characterization’’ in this table refers to the approximate scope of a research program to address toxicological data needs. The types of toxicological studies that would be considered by NTP staff during the conceptualization and design of a research program are biomolecular screening, in vitro mechanistic, in vitro and in vivo genotoxicity, absorption, disposition, metabolism, and elimination, short-term repeat dose (2–4 weeks) in vivo studies, subchronic toxicity (13–26 weeks), chronic toxicity (1–2 years), carcinogenicity in conventional or genetically modified rodent models, organ systems toxicity (immunotoxicity, reproductive and developmental toxicity, neurotoxicity), in
vivo mechanistic, toxicokinetics, and other special studies as appropriate (e.g., chemistry, toxicogenomics, phototoxicity).
2 The
To facilitate review of proposed
research projects by the NTP BSC and
the public, NTP staff developed a draft
research concept document for each
nomination recommended for study. A
research concept is a brief document
outlining the nomination or study
rationale, and the significance, study
approach, and expected outcome of a
proposed research program tailored for
each nomination. The purpose of these
research concepts is to outline the
general elements of a program of study
that would address the specific issues
that prompted the nomination, but also
encompass studies that may address
larger public health issues or topics in
toxicology that could be addressed
appropriately through studies on the
nominated substance(s). Draft research
concepts for the new nominations listed
in Table 1 will be available on the NTP
BSC meeting page (https://
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165) by October 9,
2008.
Attendance and Registration
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
The meeting is scheduled for
November 20–21, 2008, beginning at
8:30 a.m. on each day and continuing to
5 p.m. on November 20 and on
November 21 until adjournment. The
meeting is open to the public with
attendance limited only by the space
available. Individuals who plan to
attend are encouraged to register online
at the NTP BSC meeting Web site
(https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165) by
November 13, 2008, to facilitate
planning for the meeting. The NTP is
making plans to videocast the meeting
through the Internet at https://
www.niehs.nih.gov/news/video/live.
Request for Comments
Written comments submitted in
response to this notice should be
received by November 6, 2008.
Comments will be posted on the NTP
BSC meeting Web site and persons
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17:52 Oct 01, 2008
Jkt 217001
submitting them will be identified by
their name and affiliation and/or
sponsoring organization, if applicable.
Persons submitting written comments
should include their name, affiliation (if
applicable), phone, e-mail, and
sponsoring organization (if any) with
the document.
Time will be allotted during the
meeting for the public to present oral
comments to the NTP BSC on the
agenda topics. Each organization is
allowed one time slot per agenda topic.
At least 7 minutes will be allotted to
each speaker, and if time permits, may
be extended to 10 minutes at the
discretion of the NTP BSC chair.
Persons wishing to present oral
comments are encouraged to pre-register
on the NTP meeting Web site.
Registration for oral comments will also
be available on-site, although time
allowed for presentation by on-site
registrants may be less than that for preregistered speakers and will be
determined by the number of persons
who register at the meeting.
Persons registering to make oral
comments are asked, if possible, to send
a copy of their statement to the
Executive Secretary for the NTP BSC
(see ADDRESSES above) by November 13,
2008, to enable review by the NTP BSC
prior to the meeting. Written statements
can supplement and may expand the
oral presentation. If registering on-site
and reading from written text, please
bring 40 copies of the statement for
distribution to the NTP BSC and NIEHS/
NTP staff and to supplement the record.
Background Information on the NTP
Board of Scientific Counselors
The NTP BSC is a technical advisory
body comprised of scientists from the
public and private sectors that provides
primary scientific oversight to the
overall program and its centers.
Specifically, the NTP BSC advises the
NTP on matters of scientific program
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Sfmt 4703
content, both present and future, and
conducts periodic review of the program
for the purpose of determining and
advising on the scientific merit of its
activities and their overall scientific
quality. Its members are selected from
recognized authorities knowledgeable in
fields such as toxicology, pharmacology,
pathology, biochemistry, epidemiology,
risk assessment, carcinogenesis,
mutagenesis, molecular biology,
behavioral toxicology, neurotoxicology,
immunotoxicology, reproductive
toxicology or teratology, and
biostatistics. Members serve overlapping
terms of up to four years. NTP BSC
meetings are held annually or
biannually.
Dated: September 23, 2008.
Samuel H. Wilson,
Acting Director, National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences and National
Toxicology Program.
[FR Doc. E8–23181 Filed 10–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Toxicology Program (NTP);
Center for the Evaluation of Risks to
Human Reproduction (CERHR);
Announcement of Plans for Updated
Evaluations of Genistein and Soy
Formula; Request for Public
Comments and Nomination of Expert
Panel Members
National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS), National Institutes of Health
(NIH).
ACTION: Notice of expert panel
evaluation of the reproductive and
developmental toxicities of genistein
and soy formula.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The CERHR plans to convene
an expert panel to conduct updated
evaluations of the scientific evidence
E:\FR\FM\02OCN1.SGM
02OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 192 (Thursday, October 2, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57358-57360]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-23181]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Toxicology Program (NTP); Office of Liaison, Policy and
Review; Meeting of the NTP Board of Scientific Counselors
AGENCY: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS),
National Institutes of Health.
ACTION: Meeting announcement and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to Public Law 92-463, notice is hereby given of a
meeting of the NTP Board of Scientific Counselors (NTP BSC). The NTP
BSC is a federally chartered, external advisory group composed of
scientists from the public and private sectors that provides primary
scientific oversight to the NTP Director and evaluates the scientific
merit of the NTP's intramural and collaborative programs.
DATES: The NTP BSC meeting will be held on November 20-21, 2008. The
deadline for submission of written comments is November 6, 2008, and
for pre-registration to attend the meeting, including registering to
present oral comments, is November 13, 2008. Persons needing
interpreting services in order to attend should contact 301-402-8180
(voice) or 301-435-1908 (TTY). For other accommodations while on the
NIEHS campus, contact 919-541-2475 or e-mail niehsoeeo@niehs.nih.gov.
Requests should be made at least 7 days in advance of the event.
ADDRESSES: The NTP BSC meeting will be held in the Rodbell Auditorium,
Rall Building at the NIEHS, 111 T.W. Alexander Drive, Research Triangle
Park, NC 27709. Public comments on all agenda topics and any other
correspondence should be submitted to Dr. Barbara Shane, Executive
Secretary for the NTP BSC, NTP Office of Liaison, Policy and Review,
NIEHS, P.O. Box 12233, MD A3-01, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709;
telephone: 919-541-4253; fax: 919-541-0295; or e-mail:
shane@niehs.nih.gov. Courier address: NIEHS, 111 T.W. Alexander Drive,
Room A322, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Barbara Shane (telephone: 919-541-
4253 or e-mail: shane@niehs.nih.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Preliminary Agenda Topics and Availability of Meeting Materials
November 20-21, 2008
Update of NTP activities
NTP testing program: nominations and proposed research
projects on bisphenol AF, dimethylamine borane, ethylene glycol 2-
ethylhexyl ether, hydroxyurea, L-beta-methylaminoalanine, and triclosan
BSC working group report on criteria for evaluating
outcomes in immunotoxicology studies
BSC working group report on criteria for evaluating
outcomes in reproductive toxicology studies
BSC working group report on criteria for evaluating
outcomes in developmental toxicology studies
Toxicology of DNA-based therapies
Concept review: production of mold materials
Sources of variability in NTP toxicogenomic studies
Update on the High Throughput Screening Initiative
The preliminary agenda, roster of NTP BSC members and ad hoc
reviewers, draft NTP research concepts, public comments, and any
additional information, when available, will be posted on the NTP BSC
meeting Web site (https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165) or may be requested
in hardcopy from the Executive Secretary for the NTP BSC (see ADDRESSES
above). Updates to the agenda will also be posted to this site.
Following the meeting, summary minutes will be prepared and made
available on the NTP meeting Web site.
[[Page 57359]]
NTP Testing Program: Nominations and Proposed Research Projects
The NTP actively seeks to identify and select for study chemicals
and other substances for which sufficient information is not available
to adequately evaluate potential human health hazards. The NTP
accomplishes this goal through a formal open nomination and selection
process. Substances considered appropriate for study generally fall
into two broad, yet overlapping categories: (1) Substances judged to
have high concern as possible public health hazards based on the extent
of human exposure and/or suspicion of toxicity and (2) substances for
which toxicological data gaps exist and additional studies would aid in
assessing potential human health risks, e.g., by facilitating cross-
species extrapolation or evaluating dose-response relationships.
Nominations are subject to a multi-step, formal process of review
before selections for testing are made and toxicological studies are
designed and implemented. The nomination review and selection process
is accomplished through the participation of representatives from the
NIEHS, other federal agencies represented on the Interagency Committee
for Chemical Evaluation and Coordination (ICCEC), the NTP BSC, the NTP
Executive Committee--the NTP federal interagency policy body, and the
public. The nomination review and selection process is described in
further detail on the NTP Web site (https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/, select
``Nominations to the Testing Program'').
Table 1 lists new nominations to be reviewed at the NTP BSC
meeting. Background documents for each nomination are available on the
NTP Web site at https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/nom. The NTP invites
interested parties to submit written comments, provide supplementary
information, or present oral comments at the NTP BSC meeting on the
nominated substances and preliminary study recommendations (see
``Request for Comments'' below). The NTP welcomes toxicology study
information from completed, ongoing, or anticipated studies, as well as
information on current U.S. production levels, use or consumption
patterns, human exposure, environmental occurrence, or public health
concerns for any of the nominated substances. The NTP is interested in
identifying appropriate animal and non-animal experimental models for
mechanistic-based research, including genetically modified rodents and
high-throughput in vitro test methods, and as such, solicits comments
regarding the use of specific in vivo and in vitro experimental
approaches to address questions relevant to the nominated substances
and issues under consideration. Although the deadline for submission of
written comments to be considered at the NTP BSC meeting is November 6,
2008 (see ``Request for Comments'' below), the NTP welcomes comments or
additional information on these study nominations at any time.
Table 1--Testing Recommendations for Substances Nominated to the NTP for Toxicological Studies
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Preliminary study
Substance [CAS No.] Nominated by \1\ Nomination rationale recommendations \2\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bisphenol AF [1478-61-1]............. NIEHS.................. Moderate production and --Comprehensive
use in polymer toxicological
synthesis; short-term characterization.
studies suggest
potential for
endocrine disruption
and adverse
reproductive effects;
lack of adequate
toxicity data.
Dimethylamine borane [74-94-2]....... National Institute for Possible contact --Dermal absorption
Occupational Safety sensitizer and studies.
and Health. systemic toxicant but --Skin sensitization
insufficient evidence studies.
as determined by the --Subchronic dermal
NIOSH Dermal Subject toxicity studies with
Matter Expert neurotoxicity and
Workgroup. behavioral
assessments.
Ethylene glycol 2-ethylhexyl ether NIEHS.................. High production volume; --Reproductive and
[1559-35-9]. potential worker developmental toxicity
exposures; suspicion studies.
of toxicity based on
chemical structure;
lack of adequate
toxicity data.
Hydroxyurea [127-07-1]............... NIEHS and Private Long-term safety No experimental animal
Individual. concern when used as toxicity studies at
therapy for sickle this time; human
cell anemia; NTP studies currently
Center for the being considered by
Evaluation of Risks to the NIH and other
Human Reproduction federal agencies may
(CERHR) Expert Panel address outstanding
identified a critical safety concerns.
data need for multi-
generational
experimental animal
studies to assess the
long-term effects of
prenatal and postnatal
exposures on postnatal
development including
developmental
neurotoxicity,
reproductive function,
and carcinogenicity.
L-beta-Methylaminoalanine [15920-93- NIEHS.................. Natural product --Absorption,
1]. produced by distribution,
cyanobacteria with metabolism, and
localized and elimination studies.
potentially widespread --Neurotoxicity
environmental studies.
occurrence; suspected --Biomolecular
risk factor for screening studies.
neurological
disease(s); lack of
adequate toxicity data.
[[Page 57360]]
Triclosan [3380-34-5]................ Private Individual and Widespread use in --Carcinogenicity
U.S. Food and Drug consumer products; studies via dermal
Administration. frequent and long-term administration.
exposure for all age --Phototoxicity
groups; lack of studies.
adequate toxicity data --Reproductive toxicity
for dermal exposures. studies.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS).
\2\ The term ``comprehensive toxicological characterization'' in this table refers to the approximate scope of a
research program to address toxicological data needs. The types of toxicological studies that would be
considered by NTP staff during the conceptualization and design of a research program are biomolecular
screening, in vitro mechanistic, in vitro and in vivo genotoxicity, absorption, disposition, metabolism, and
elimination, short-term repeat dose (2-4 weeks) in vivo studies, subchronic toxicity (13-26 weeks), chronic
toxicity (1-2 years), carcinogenicity in conventional or genetically modified rodent models, organ systems
toxicity (immunotoxicity, reproductive and developmental toxicity, neurotoxicity), in vivo mechanistic,
toxicokinetics, and other special studies as appropriate (e.g., chemistry, toxicogenomics, phototoxicity).
To facilitate review of proposed research projects by the NTP BSC
and the public, NTP staff developed a draft research concept document
for each nomination recommended for study. A research concept is a
brief document outlining the nomination or study rationale, and the
significance, study approach, and expected outcome of a proposed
research program tailored for each nomination. The purpose of these
research concepts is to outline the general elements of a program of
study that would address the specific issues that prompted the
nomination, but also encompass studies that may address larger public
health issues or topics in toxicology that could be addressed
appropriately through studies on the nominated substance(s). Draft
research concepts for the new nominations listed in Table 1 will be
available on the NTP BSC meeting page (https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165)
by October 9, 2008.
Attendance and Registration
The meeting is scheduled for November 20-21, 2008, beginning at
8:30 a.m. on each day and continuing to 5 p.m. on November 20 and on
November 21 until adjournment. The meeting is open to the public with
attendance limited only by the space available. Individuals who plan to
attend are encouraged to register online at the NTP BSC meeting Web
site (https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/165) by November 13, 2008, to
facilitate planning for the meeting. The NTP is making plans to
videocast the meeting through the Internet at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/
news/video/live.
Request for Comments
Written comments submitted in response to this notice should be
received by November 6, 2008. Comments will be posted on the NTP BSC
meeting Web site and persons submitting them will be identified by
their name and affiliation and/or sponsoring organization, if
applicable. Persons submitting written comments should include their
name, affiliation (if applicable), phone, e-mail, and sponsoring
organization (if any) with the document.
Time will be allotted during the meeting for the public to present
oral comments to the NTP BSC on the agenda topics. Each organization is
allowed one time slot per agenda topic. At least 7 minutes will be
allotted to each speaker, and if time permits, may be extended to 10
minutes at the discretion of the NTP BSC chair. Persons wishing to
present oral comments are encouraged to pre-register on the NTP meeting
Web site. Registration for oral comments will also be available on-
site, although time allowed for presentation by on-site registrants may
be less than that for pre-registered speakers and will be determined by
the number of persons who register at the meeting.
Persons registering to make oral comments are asked, if possible,
to send a copy of their statement to the Executive Secretary for the
NTP BSC (see ADDRESSES above) by November 13, 2008, to enable review by
the NTP BSC prior to the meeting. Written statements can supplement and
may expand the oral presentation. If registering on-site and reading
from written text, please bring 40 copies of the statement for
distribution to the NTP BSC and NIEHS/NTP staff and to supplement the
record.
Background Information on the NTP Board of Scientific Counselors
The NTP BSC is a technical advisory body comprised of scientists
from the public and private sectors that provides primary scientific
oversight to the overall program and its centers. Specifically, the NTP
BSC advises the NTP on matters of scientific program content, both
present and future, and conducts periodic review of the program for the
purpose of determining and advising on the scientific merit of its
activities and their overall scientific quality. Its members are
selected from recognized authorities knowledgeable in fields such as
toxicology, pharmacology, pathology, biochemistry, epidemiology, risk
assessment, carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, molecular biology, behavioral
toxicology, neurotoxicology, immunotoxicology, reproductive toxicology
or teratology, and biostatistics. Members serve overlapping terms of up
to four years. NTP BSC meetings are held annually or biannually.
Dated: September 23, 2008.
Samuel H. Wilson,
Acting Director, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
and National Toxicology Program.
[FR Doc. E8-23181 Filed 10-1-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P