This R package provides data and models for prediction toxicokinetics (chemical absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion by the body). The models are design to be parameterized with chemical-specific in vitro (animal free) measurments. The predictions can be used for traditional dosimetry as well as in vivo-in vitro extrapolation (IVIVE) of in vitro bioactivity testing data (for example, ToxCast). See Breen et al. (2021, https://doi.org/10.1080/17425255.2021.1935867) for a recent review.
This repository is for reporting bugs and contributing enhancements. Installable files, documentation, and other information can be obtained from https://cran.r-project.org/package=httk.
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) (https://doi.org/10.18637/jss.v079.i04).
Chemical-specific in vitro data characterizing toxicokinetics can be
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. The models are systems of ordinary differential
equations that are solved using compiled (C-based) code for speed. A
Monte Carlo sampler is included for simulating human biological
variability (Ring et al., 2017 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2017.06.004) and
propagating parameter uncertainty (Wambaugh et al., 2019 https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfz205). Empirically
calibrated methods are included for predicting tissue:plasma partition
coefficients and volume of distribution
(Pearce et al., 2017 https://doi.org/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 https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfv171).
For an introduction to R, see Irizarry (2022) “Introduction to Data Science”: https://rafalab.github.io/dsbook/getting-started.html
For an introduction to toxicokinetics, with examples in “httk”, see Ring (2021) in the “TAME Toolkit”: https://uncsrp.github.io/Data-Analysis-Training-Modules/toxicokinetic-modeling.html
install.packages("X")
Or, if using RStudio, look for ‘Install Packages’ under ‘Tools’ tab. * Note that R does not recognize fancy versions of quotation marks ‘,\(~\)’,\(~\)“, or\(~\)”. If you are cutting and pasting from software like Word or Outlook you may need to replace the quotation marks that curve toward each other with ones typed by the keyboard.
Adapted from Breen et al. (2021) https://doi.org/10.1080/17425255.2021.1935867 * Getting Started with R Package httk from the R command line
install.packages("httk")
Load the HTTK data, models, and functions
library(httk)
packageVersion("httk")
get_cheminfo()
get_cheminfo(info = "all", median.only=TRUE)
"80-05-7" %in% get_cheminfo()
subset(get_cheminfo(info = "all"), Compound %in% c("A","B","C"))
calc_mc_oral_equiv(0.1,chem.cas = "34256-82-1",species = "human")
calc_mc_oral_equiv(0.1,chem.cas = "99-71-8", species = "human")
calc_tkstats(chem.cas = "34256-82-1",species = "rat")
calc_tkstats(chem.cas = "962-58-3", species = "rat")
solve_pbtk(chem.name = "bisphenol a", plots = TRUE)
my_data <- subset(get_cheminfo(info = "all"), Compound %in% c("A","B","C"))
write.csv(my_data, file = "my_data.csv")
help(httk)
help(package = httk)
vignette(package = "httk")
vignette("IntroToHTTK")
John Wambaugh [wambaugh.john@epa.gov]
Sarah Davidson [Davidson.Sarah.E@epa.gov]
Robert Pearce, Caroline Ring [Ring.Caroline@epa.gov], Greg Honda [honda.gregory@epa.gov], Mark Sfeir, Matt Linakis [MLINAKIS@ramboll.com], and Dustin Kapraun [kapraun.dustin@epa.gov]
Miyuki Breen [breen.miyuki@epa.gov], Shannon Bell
[Shannon.bell@inotivco.com], Xiaoqing Chang
[Xiaoqing.chang@inotivco.com], Todor Antonijevic
[tantonijevic@toxstrategies.com], Jimena Davis, James Sluka
[jsluka@indiana.edu],
Nisha Sipes [sipes.nisha@epa.gov], and Barbara Wetmore
[wetmore.barbara@epa.gov]
Woodrow Setzer [setzer.woodrow@epa.gov]
License: GPL-3 https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.en.html