๐ NeXED DC project proposals, 3 afternoons | Online
Between 27 May and 4 June 2026, all doctoral candidates successfully presented their project proposals during the 3rd NeXED Network-wide Training Event. The event fostered in-depth discussions on research methodologies, project approaches, future milestones, and potential collaborations through three thematic sessions: Development and application of AOP-networks, Cross-species comparisons, and Cross-axis interactions and chemical/mixture selection.
๐ NeXED represented at SETAC Maastricht
A delegation of NeXED PhD students just showcased their work at ๐โจ
So inspiring to see them engaging with the scientific community, sharing their research, and confidently joining discussions in the poster sessions ๐ฌ๐ฌ
You did an amazing job promoting our work on EDCs, AOPs, OMICs, zebrafish, Environmental Health, and OneHealth ๐งช๐๐
Well done!! ๐ ๐ , , , , , and โ
๐ NeXED Core training workshops, 8 workshops of 2h | Online
Between 4 February and 30 April 2026, all doctoral candidates successfully completed the NeXED Core Training Workshops. Throughout the program, they explored topics such as principles of (eco)toxicology, principles of endocrine disruption, regulatory assessment and identification of EDs, New Approach Methodologies (NAMs), analytical chemistry and its application for assessment of EDs, Adverse Outcome Pathways (AOPs) and its applications, and systematic review methodology and Weight of Evidence assessment.
๐ฃ News from EURL ECVAM - April 2026
๐ NeXED Kick-off meeting
Last week, our NeXED team finally came together in person and it was absolutely energizing! ๐
We enjoyed two days filled with inspiring oral and poster presentations, plenary sessions, scientific discussions, and many moments of genuine connection. The room was buzzing with ideas, collaboration, and excitement for whatโs ahead.
A huge thank you to all participants for your enthusiasm. You made this kickoff a true success. This is only the beginning, and we are very much looking forward to whatโs coming NeXED ๐
๐๐ฌ Campus Club at the University of Antwerp - Laura Veensalu and Peter Schumann
On February 3, Campus Club took place at the , welcoming students from the fifth and sixth years of secondary school to get a first taste of university life๐
During the zebrafish embryo workshop ๐๐, our doctoral candidates and introduced students to early developmental stages while sharing their experiences as PhD researchers ๐ฉโ๐ฌ๐จโ๐ฌ
Students observed zebrafish embryos under the microscope ๐ฌ, identified different developmental stages themselves, and discussed their observations - thinking like real researchers ๐ฅผ
Beyond developmental biology, the session also highlighted how zebrafish embryos are used in (eco)toxicology to study the impact of environmental pollutants on early life stages ๐๐งช
We hope this workshop sparked curiosity and perhaps even inspired the next generation of scientist ๐
โ โ
โจ Meet the NeXED team! โจ
On 27 January 2026, we held our first online meet & greet meeting, bringing together our PhD candidates and their supervisors for the first time. Everyone introduced themselves and shared their research interests and roles within the network, giving a great overview of the exciting science ahead. The meeting was very engaging and set a positive, collaborative tone for the project. Weโre thrilled to be working with such a motivated and diverse team and are really looking forward to the collaboration, training activities, and scientific progress to come.
๐Poster presentation - Lea Berger
Our doctoral candidate had the opportunity to present her project at the PhD Retreat 2026 in Milano Marittima.
The event was organized by the PhD program Pharmacological and Biomolecular Sciences, Experimental and Clinical at the University of Milan. Lea showcased her poster titled:
๐ง โNovel approaches to assess the impact of EDCs in the adult nervous systemโ
This work is supervised by
๐ Keywords: nonโEATS โข retinoid signaling โข adult neurotoxicity โข AOPs โข IATA โข NAMs
๐ First NeXED Doctoral Candidates meeting
On 5 November 2025, we had our first group meeting with the NeXED DCs. Really happy to meet everyone and kick off the research and training programme.
Peter Schumann - Trainee Author Spotlight
Trainee Author Spotlight: Peter Schumann will be starting as a PhD student at the University of Antwerp later this fall, and is first author ona recent ToxSci article: .
What are you working on now that youโre particularly excited about and how will it advance the field?"
In my graduate studies, I will be developing a cross-species Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) network for neurotoxicity resulting from exposure to endocrine disrupting compounds. This will provide a toxicological context for molecular-level impacts from chemical exposure that can be extrapolated to potential ecological effects through a cross-species perspective.
"When you arenโt engaged in scientific research, what are your hobbies, interests, or passions?"
I love spending time outdoors, walking through the forest, identifying plants and mushrooms, and gardening. I also love to rock climb (mostly bouldering). Lately, since I've been preparing for a move to Belgium (Flanders region), I've been spending a lot of time learning Dutch.
"Any fun facts about yourself that you want to share with ToxSci readers? "
I have a dog named Chaga, who is named after a medicinal fungus (Inonotus obliquus) that grows on birch trees in the forests around my small town in northern Wisconsin."
๐ Meet the NeXED Doctoral Candidates
๐งโ๐ DC1: Clara Kempkens (Lead supervisor: Lisa Baumann, VU)
๐งโ๐ DC2: Tommaso Giorgi (Lead supervisor: Terje Svingen, DTU)
๐งโ๐ DC3: Peter Schumann (Lead supervisor: Dries Knapen, UA)
๐งโ๐ DC4: Muhammad Arslan Aslam (Lead supervisor: Anna Beronius, KI)
๐งโ๐ DC5: Gabriele Morillo (Lead supervisor: David Du Pasquier, WF)
๐งโ๐ DC6: Gabrielle Guillaume Boulaire (Lead supervisor: Klรกra Hilscherovรก, MU)
๐งโ๐ DC7: Marta Silva (Lead supervisor: Henrik Holbeck, SDU)
๐งโ๐ DC8: Laura Veensalu (Lead supervisor: Lucia Vergauwen, UA)
๐งโ๐ DC9: Javier Marin (Lead supervisor: Adrian Covaci, UA)
๐งโ๐ DC10: Lea Berger (Lead supervisor: Barbara Viviani, UMIL)
๐งโ๐ DC11: Yann Stehly (Lead supervisor: Elvis Genbo Xu, SDU)
๐งโ๐ DC12: Emilie Daut (Lead supervisor: Pim Leonards, VU)
๐งโ๐ DC13: Giorgio Repossi (Lead supervisor: Jean-Baptiste Fini, CNRS)
๐งโ๐ DC14: Nora Karlsson (Lead supervisor: Timo Hamers, VU)
๐งโ๐ DC15: Megan Parker (Lead supervisor: Ioanna Katsiadaki, Cefas)
๐ Meet the NeXED consortium
We are an international team of toxicologist and ecotoxicologist working on endocrine disruptor assessment. In this MSCA Doctoral Network, we will combine our expertise with different partners from academia, industry, regulatory agencies, SMEs and consultancy firms.
We will train the next generation of cross-disciplinary toxicologists specialized in harmonized One Health approaches to protect humans and the environment from the impact of harmful chemicals.
On 21/ January 2025, we had our kick-off meeting and prepared the 15 PhD vacancies to be opened soon.
Meet the 15 PIs and project manager: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and .
See our list of NeXED lead supervisors here!
Click here to browse the entire consortium!
๐ NeXED Goes Social: Follow Us on LinkedIn
We are pleased to share that our official NeXED LinkedIn page is now active. Together with the News and Outreach sections on our website, this platform will provide regular updates on network achievements, forthcoming events, and research developments across NeXED.
๐ LinkedIn: โ
๐ Launching NeXED, an MSCA Doctoral Network!
NeXED will train the next generation of true cross-disciplinary toxicologists specialized in harmonized One Health approaches for the assessment of endocrine disrupters, no longer approaching assessment of chemicals from either a human or an environmental health perspective separately.
๐ We bring together 10 partners and 10 associated partners from 10 countries, all leading experts in the assessment of endocrine disruptors.
๐ NeXED will host 15 PhD candidates across Europe!
Follow us on !
๐๏ธ Introducing the core NeXED principles
NeXED is a doctoral network that is designed to train a new generation of cross-disciplinary toxicologists specialised in human AND environmental risk assessment of endocrine disruptors.
Why is this cross-disciplinary approach so important? ๐ก
Traditionally, regulatory procedures for identification and assessment of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are separated for human health and the environment. Due to the similarities in toxicological responses between humans and wildlife, there is an opportunity to share toxicological information between these two disciplines. Several projects have been working on such a holistic approach, including the Horizon 2020 project , by developing a cross-species approach for extrapolation of EDC effects across vertebrate classes. Also the , focuses on development of methods, AOPs and IATAs for both human and environmental health. The separation of disciplines is also reflected in the different trainings of toxicologists and ecotoxicologists at Universities.
Consequently, based on past and ongoing efforts in EURION and PARC, NeXED combines the expertise of 15 EDC researchers from both fields: classic toxicology (focused on humans) and ecotoxicology (focused on the environment).
Doctoral candidates in NeXED will benefit from being trained in both fields, human end environmental toxicology, thereby promoting the urgently needed paradigm shift in EDC assessment towards One Health.
The mixture makes the poison?&ฒิฒ๚ฒ๕ฑ่;โ ๏ธ๐งช
Current risk assessment methods for EDCs focus on individual chemicals, as required by EU regulations like REACH. However, in real life, humans and the environment are exposed to complex mixtures of potential EDCs, such as PFAS.
Chemical mixtures, with different ED mechanisms, can interact in ways we donโt fully understand, especially given the crosstalk between endocrine systems, such as the thyroid and steroid hormone system. Thus, investigating the effects of real-life EDC mixtures is essential for more accurate and realistic EDC assessments to protect human and environmental health.
In NeXED, we will gain insight into interaction among endocrine axes in complex exposure mixtures including analysis of the exposome in order to improve environmental realism in EDC assessment. 5 of the 15 PhD projects in NeXED will work with mixtures of EDCs and assess their effects using different in silico, in vitro and in vivo methods.
How can we improve regulatory testing of endocrine disruptors EDCs?&ฒิฒ๚ฒ๕ฑ่;๐ฅผ๐งชโ ๏ธ
The current regulatory framework for EDC testing has multiple gaps that will be addressed in the doctoral network NeXED:
โ The / guidance currently focuses on Estrogen, Androgen, Thyroid and Steroidogenesis (EATS) modalities but does not include other endocrine modalities, such as retinoic acid pathway signalling or xenobiotic receptors.
โ Currently validated assays only cover vertebrate species (mammals, fish and amphibians) but lack tests for the assessment of EDCs in invertebrates, even though promising approaches are available.
โ Existing test approaches do not take the complexity of the endocrine system into account. Advanced metabolomics analyses can be applied to investigate crosstalk and feedback loops.
โ PhD projects in NeXED will develop novel approaches for EDC assessment such as the inclusion of non-EATS modalities, application of invertebrate tests, and advanced metabolomics approaches.