| Literature DB >> 24423201 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The ethical quality of animal research is important for many reasons, including for maintaining public support. We aimed to determine the reported attention to the ethical dimensions of the 3Rs (Refinement, Reduction, and Replacement) in critical care animal research published in 2012.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24423201 PMCID: PMC4056799 DOI: 10.1186/cc13694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
The reported ethical quality of animal research published in three critical care journals during 6 months of 2012: refinement
| Criterion of refinement | Number of 77 publications meeting criterion (
|
|---|---|
| Anesthesia | |
| Anesthesia was used when indicateda | 71 (96% of 74) |
| Monitoring of the level of anesthesia during invasive procedures described | 5 (7% of 71) |
| Muscle paralytics were used during anesthesia | 12 (16%) |
| Monitoring of the level of anesthesia during muscle paralysis described | 2 (17% of 12) |
| Analgesia | |
| When pain was to be expected, pain medication was used | 7 (14% of 49) |
| Monitoring of the level of pain was stated | 2 (4% of 49) |
| If analgesia was withheld, a justification was stated | 0 (0% of 42) |
| Euthanasia | |
| When euthanasia was used, the method was stated | 38 (59% of 65) |
| The method of euthanasia was appropriate for that speciesb | 15 (39% of 38) [ |
| 16 (42% of 38) [ | |
| Whether survivor animals were euthanized at the end of the experiment was stated when indicated | 19 (42% of 45) |
| Animal husbandry | |
| Details of animal caging reportedc | 7 (9%) |
| Any description of room environmentd | 12 (16%) |
| Any mention of diete | 16 (21%) |
a In the three cases in which anesthesia was not used, no justification was stated for this.
b Euthanasia appropriate for each species was determined by using the guidelines reported by the Canadian Council on Animal Care [38], and the American Veterinary Medical Association [39], respectively. None of the studies in which methods were not appropriate for species offered a justification.
c Details of caging described were ventilation (1), number per cage (6). No study mentioned sound, air filtering, cage size, handling frequency, bedding material, or cage enrichment.
d Laboratory room environment described was lighting on/off timing (11), temperature (6), and humidity (2). No study mentioned lighting type, noise, or vibration.
e Diet described was food type (3), food access (15; ad lib 12, restricted 3), water type (1), water access (16; all ad lib).
The reported ethical quality of animal research published in three critical care journals during 6 months of 2012: reduction and replacement
| Criterion | Number of 77 publications meeting criterion (
|
|---|---|
|
| |
| Sample-size calculation for primary outcome reported | 4 (5%) |
| Animal numbers stated in Methods | 61 (79%) |
| Extra animals mentioned in the Results (that were not stated in Methods) | 31 (40%) |
|
| |
| Systematic review of literature referenced or done | 0 (0%) |
| Alternative methods to using animals were considereda | 1 (1%) |
| Why that animal model was chosen was mentionedb | 17 (22%) |
a Alternative not used because “unethical to use in humans.”
b Why that animal model was used: similarity to humans (10), laboratory experience with model (one), a published model (six).
The reported ethical quality of animal research published in three critical care journals during 6 months of 2012: composite outcomes and funding sources
| Criterion | Number of 77 publications meeting criterion (
|
|---|---|
|
| |
| If indicated, using anesthesia, pain control, and stating the method of euthanasia | 17 (22%) |
| Criteria above, and the euthanasia method stated was appropriate for the speciesa | 8 (10%) |
| Criteria above, and describing a sample size calculation | 3 (4%) |
|
| |
| Funded by government | 51 (74% of 69) |
| Funded by foundation | 34 (49% of 69) |
| Funded by industry | 11 (16% of 69) |
a Euthanasia appropriate for each species determined by using the guidelines reported by the Canadian Council on Animal Care [38].
The reported ethical quality of animal research published in three critical care journals during 6 months of 2012: rodent/rabbit versus nonrodent/nonrabbit subgroup
| Criterion | Number of publications meeting criterion (
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rodent/rabbit ( | Nonrodent/nonrabbit ( |
| |
|
| |||
| When euthanasia was used, the method of euthanasia was stated | 25 (50% of 50) | 13 (87% of 15) | 0.010 |
| This method of euthanasia was appropriate for that species | 7 (28% of 25) | 8 (62% of 13) | 0.003 |
|
| |||
| Animal numbers stated in methods | 35 (65%) | 21 (91%) | 0.049 |
| Extra animals mentioned in the results (that were not stated in methods) | 27 (50%) | 4 (17%) | 0.007 |
|
| |||
| If indicated, using anesthesia, pain control, and stating the method of euthanasia. | 10 (19%) | 15 (65%) | <0.001 |
| Criteria above, and the method used was appropriate for the speciesa | 5 (9%) | 11 (48%) | <0.001 |
| Criteria above, and describing a sample-size calculation | 2 (4%) | 1 (4%) | ns |
Animals in the publications were nonrodent/nonrabbit baboon (1), dog (3), pig (17), sheep (2); rodent/rabbit-mouse (17), rabbit (5), rat (32). P value is based on χ2 statistics. No other statistically significant differences were noted in any of the other variables shown in Tables 1, 2, and 3.
aAs there were no differences in 'euthanasia was appropriate for species' in the nonrodent/nonrabbit subgroup by using the two standards (Canadian Council on Animal Care [38], and American Veterinary Medical Association [39]) , only analysis for the Canadian standards is shown.