| Literature DB >> 12388850 |
David Smith1, Caren Broadhead, Gerard Descotes, Richard Fosse, Ruediger Hack, Klaus Krauser, Rudolf Pfister, Barry Phillips, Yvon Rabemampianina, James Sanders, Sue Sparrow, Markus Stephan-Gueldner, Soren Dyring Jacobsen.
Abstract
This review of the dog, the primary nonrodent species used in toxicology, and its use in the safety evaluation of pharmaceuticals, provides data on the number used in particular projects in an effort to establish a baseline from which some minimization can be measured. Opportunities for reduction and replacement, as identified by a European Industry/Welfare Steering Group, are discussed. The three distinct areas of potential approaches to minimize dog use are categorized as industrial cooperation/data sharing, achieving best practice in study design, and assessing the need for a particular study. The Steering Group prioritized the approaches based on the impact on the number of animals used, the impact on the welfare of the remaining animals, the potential for industry's acceptance of the scientific approach, the potential for regulators' acceptance of the validated approach, and the time/cost of evaluation or implementation. Examples of each category are presented, and the work needed to facilitate industry/regulatory change is discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12388850 DOI: 10.1093/ilar.43.suppl_1.s39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ILAR J ISSN: 1084-2020