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Review Article

What can nanosafety learn from drug development? The feasibility of “safety by design”

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Pages 305-312 | Received 08 Dec 2016, Accepted 20 Feb 2017, Published online: 17 Mar 2017
 

Abstract

“Safety by design” (SbD) is an intuitively appealing concept that is on the rise within nanotoxicology and nanosafety research, as well as within nanotechnology research policy. It leans on principles established within drug discovery and development (DDD) and seeks to address safety early, as well as throughout product development. However, it remains unclear what the concept of SbD exactly entails for engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) or how it is envisioned to be implemented. Here, we review the concept as it is emerging in European research and compare its resemblance with the safety testing and assessment practices in DDD. From this comparison, it is clear that “safety” is not obtained through DDD, and that SbD should be considered a starting point rather than an end, meaning that products will still need to progress through thorough safety evaluations and regulation. We conclude that although risk reduction is clearly desirable, the way SbD is currently communicated tends to treat safety as an inherent material property and that this is fundamentally problematic as it represents a recasting and reduction of societal issues into technical problems. SbD therefore faces a multitude of challenges, from practical implementation to unrealistic stakeholder expectations.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Torsten Fleischer for helpful comments on an early draft. Authors thank the NorNANoREG project (project #2391199/070) funded by the Research Council of Norway for funding Fern Wickson.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

Authors thank the NorNANoREG project (project #2391199/070) funded by the Research Council of Norway for funding Fern Wickson.

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