Knight
A. Systematic reviews of animal experiments demonstrate
poor human clinical and toxicological utility.
Altern
Lab Anim 2007;
35(6): 641-659.
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size, 1.28 mb).
ABSTRACT
The assumption that animal models are reasonably
predictive of human outcomes provides the basis for their
widespread use in toxicity testing and in biomedical
research aimed at developing cures for human diseases. To
investigate the validity of this assumption, the
comprehensive Scopus biomedical bibliographic databases
were searched for published systematic reviews of the
human clinical or toxicological utility of animal
experiments. In 20 reviews in which clinical utility was
examined, the authors concluded that animal models were
either significantly useful in contributing to the
development of clinical interventions, or were
substantially consistent with clinical outcomes, in only
two cases, one of which was contentious. These included
reviews of the clinical utility of experiments expected
by ethics committees to lead to medical advances, of
highly-cited experiments published in major journals, and
of chimpanzee experiments — those involving the species
considered most likely to be predictive of human
outcomes. Seven additional reviews failed to clearly
demonstrate utility in predicting human toxicological
outcomes, such as carcinogenicity and teratogenicity.
Consequently, animal data may not generally be assumed to
be substantially useful for these purposes. Possible
causes include interspecies differences, the distortion
of outcomes arising from experimental environments and
protocols, and the poor methodological quality of many
animal experiments, which was evident in at least 11
reviews. No reviews existed in which the majority of
animal experiments were of good methodological quality.
Whilst the effects of some of these problems might be
minimised with concerted effort (given their widespread
prevalence), the limitations resulting from interspecies
differences are likely to be technically and
theoretically impossible to overcome. Non-animal models
are generally required to pass formal scientific
validation prior to their regulatory acceptance. In
contrast, animal models are simply assumed to be
predictive of human outcomes. These results demonstrate
the invalidity of such assumptions. The consistent
application of formal validation studies to all test
models is clearly warranted, regardless of their animal,
non-animal, historical, contemporary or possible future
status. Likely benefits would include, the greater
selection of models truly predictive of human outcomes,
increased safety of people exposed to chemicals that have
passed toxicity tests, increased efficiency during the
development of human pharmaceuticals and other
therapeutic interventions, and decreased wastage of
animal, personnel and financial resources. The poor human
clinical and toxicological utility of most animal models
for which data exists, in conjunction with their
generally substantial animal welfare and economic costs,
justify a ban on animal models lacking scientific data
clearly establishing their human predictivity or utility.
Summaries
Knight
A. Systematic reviews of animal experiments demonstrate
poor contributions toward human healthcare.
Reviews
Recent Clin Trials 2008;
3(2): 89-96.
http://www.bentham-direct.org/pages/content.php?RRCT/2008/00000003/00000002/0002RRCT.sgm.
Download (152 kb).
Knight
A. Animal experiments scrutinised: systematic reviews
demonstrate poor human clinical and toxicological
utility. ALTEX
2007;
24(4): 320-5.
Download (676 kb). French translation (74 kb).