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Science

Science is Getting Closer To a World Without Animal Testing (ft.com) 24

Academics and pharmaceutical companies hope that technology based on human cells will help them phase mice and monkeys out of their labs. From a report: The umbrella term for the new field is microphysiological systems or MPS, which includes tumoroids, organoids and organs-on-a-chip. Organoids are grown from stem cells to create 3D tissue in a dish resembling miniature human organs; heart organoids beat like the real thing, for example. Organs-on-a-chip are plastic blocks lined with stem cells and a circuit that stimulates the mechanics of an organ. "We need to move away from animals in a systematic way," says Salim Abdool Karim, South Africa's leading infectious disease expert. "Thatâ...âinvolves regulators being given the data to show that non-animal biological systems will give us compatible, if not better, information." Nathalie Brandenburg co-founded Swiss start-up Sun Bioscience in 2016 to create standard versions of organoids, which makes it easier to trust that results are comparable, and convince scientists and regulators to use them. "When we started we had to tell people what organoids were," she says, referring to the early stage of her research journey.

In the past two years, and particularly as scientists emerged from lockdowns -- when many had time to read up on the technology -- demand from large pharmaceutical companies for Sun's products has soared, she says. Companies are becoming more interested in reducing their reliance on animals for ethical reasons, says Arron Tolley, chief executive of Aptamer Group, which creates artificial antibodies for use in diagnostics and drugs. "People are becoming more responsible now, from a corporate governance point of view, and looking to remove animal testing when necessary," he says. Using larger animals, such as monkeys, is particularly problematic, Tolley adds. "The bigger and cuter they get, the more people are aware of the impact." Rare diseases are especially fertile ground for models based on human tissues, says James Hickman, chief scientist at Hesperos, an organ-on-a-chip company based in Florida. "There are 7,000 rare diseases and only 400 are being actively researched because there are no animal models," Hickman says. "We're not just talking about replacing animals or reducing animals, these systems fill a void where animal models don't exist."

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Science is Getting Closer To a World Without Animal Testing

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  • However, it does make ethical sense to minimize it.
    • I predict the demand for some species will decline, and they will become endangered or worse.
      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Right because lab animals are some sort of major animal population base.

        Rats, rabbits, and pigs arent going anywhere with or without this and given that many of the minimal number of chimps https://releasechimps.org/abou... [releasechimps.org]. being used for science are caught in the wild this will probably help their numbers in the wild.

      • In modern research, animals for animal models aren't wild type animals, they're specific breeds. Worrying that BALB C mice become endangered is like worrying that Doberman pinchers would become endangered.
      • yea. Us.

    • in some cases after computer modeling and testing against synthetic tissues in a lab (microphysiological systems), we'll be able to jump straight to human trials. Saves cost, shortens time to market, and reduces cruelty. I suspect we'll spend a lot more time this century reacting to infectious diseases than we originally expected. Apparently people aren't willing to accept getting pneumonia and dying as just a fact of life. So we're motivated to fight COVID, monkeypox, polio, etc.

    • by Shark ( 78448 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @02:52PM (#62791808)

      Now now, it seems we've achieved high enough a level of misanthropy to skip it and move straight to humans. All you really need the right political environment to indemnify you of all legal consequences and you can test just about anything on humans. I mean, we were already doing it, but back then, we had to factor in the cost of lawsuits and fines into the economic planning. That investment in better PR really paid off, we can even get people pissed off at anyone who points it out.

      • Reminds me of the story of a lab trying to appease animal rights supporters by replacing rats with lawyers, thinking that certainly no one would mind testing on lawyers. Though they were right about that, the experiment failed for three reasons: space requirements were problematic, the lab personnel refused to work with lawyers, saying rats are much more pleasant, and scientists had trouble relating results to potential effects on human beings.
    • It depends. Are we saying it's better not to test on animals and humans? are we equal? If we don't test on animals then by inference we are testing in Prod on Humans. Will warning labels say side effects unknown? Is it ethical on humans? If we push these ethics will they be applied globally or will labs simply be setup in countries that get the research done.
    • Until one realizes the consequences: A bottle of pet shampoo brags, "Not tested on animals". Are you really wanting to use a product not tested?
  • I hope they have an equal number of cultures of cells from asian, caucasian, african, and male and female.

    Otherwise this is just a waste of time.

    • Very few diseases are ethnicity specific. Humans from many different places all share genetics that are very, very similar. In fact, some animals like penguins have greater genetic diversity among members in the same sub species than humans do across ethnicities. We simply as a species have not been around long enough for any significant diversity in our genetics to accumulate, and because of our one-world civilization with mixing from all parts of the world, we likely never will, unless a group sets off to
      • That's a great sounding statement, and it's actually entirely untrue, from a scientific perspective.

        Around 20% of drugs [wolterskluwer.com]approved in the past year have known differences in results and outcomes based on ethnicity. This has led to an entire field of research called Pharmacogenomics [medlineplus.gov] which specifically tries to understand why people often have different reactions to drugs and the role genetics plays; by default this includes ethnicities.

        A well known example is ACE Inhibitor drugs, which are designed to

  • by Z80a ( 971949 ) on Monday August 15, 2022 @03:01PM (#62791840)

    Are they not satisfied into integrating the network, sound, video, sata, usb, PS/2, serial and modem into the chipset? do they really need to integrate the user on it as well?

  • Looks like a great article, shame the editors linked us to a web site that has a pay wall. Anyone got an actual usable link?
  • When developing new drugs, animal testing answers several questions. But this technique addresses only question #1 (and maybe #2) below.

    1) What is the molecular mechanism behind the disease?

    2) How does a new candidate treatment 'fix' the disease by interfering with the cause of breakage (antagonist) or by replacing a broken component (agonist)?

    3) How can we measure the disease's progression, or after treatment, the healing of diseased tissues in all affected tissues?

    4) Does the candidate treatment cause to

    • I'm thinking this technique might limit the size of animal cohort studies more than that they're needed at all. E.g. a smaller natural history study and safety study, where this sort of thing would help give you more data points without needing to sac so many animals.
  • I'm glad animal testing was possible, and I'll be glad to see it to the door. Same for fossil fuels. I'm glad they got us where we are, and I'll be glad to see them recede.

  • All you have to do now is convince the government(s). Virtually all animal testing by commercial organizations is done because of the requirements of government regulations. The question is how willing will they be to make changes? Non-animal tests of one sort or another have been available for years, but they are not accepted for regulatory approvals. The truth is that most animal testing is to fill in spaces in regulatory forms and has no real safety justification anyway. A typical shampoo would be c
  • Don't worry, the cosmetics industry will pick up the slack.

  • They just get nervous and give the wrong answers.

  • A world without any animal testing at all is a world where the testing is done on human beings in the marketplace after the sale of the product. Methinks that is not the elimination of testing on animals but rather a shift on which species of animal the product's safety & efficacy is tested on.

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