| Literature DB >> 29590200 |
Pandora Pound1, Christine J Nicol2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The harm benefit analysis (HBA) is the cornerstone of animal research regulation and is considered to be a key ethical safeguard for animals. The HBA involves weighing the anticipated benefits of animal research against its predicted harms to animals but there are doubts about how objective and accountable this process is.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29590200 PMCID: PMC5874012 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Bateson’s cube.
Study locations, numbers of animals and publication dates.
| Location | Institution | Publication dates of studies | |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA 4; Sweden 2; | Universities 4; hospitals 2 | 1967–1997 | |
| USA 6; Japan 3; Poland 2; China 2; Italy 2; Brazil 1 | Pharmaceutical and hospital / university collaboration 5; pharmaceutical company 4; university 4; hospital 1; hospital/ university collaboration 1; centre for disease control 1 | 1991–2005 | |
| USA 8; Israel 2; Turkey 2; Sweden 2; Germany 1; Mexico 1; South Korea 1; Taiwan 1 | Universities 12; pharmaceutical companies 3; hospital / university collaboration 1; hospital 1 | 1975–2005 | |
| Germany 7; USA 7; UK 1; Canada 1; Sweden 1; South Korea 1; Japan 1; Switzerland 1; Turkey 1 | Universities 14; hospital 1; hospital / university collaboration 2; pharmaceutical / university collaboration 1 | 1990–2004 | |
| USA 47; Australia 7; Japan 3; Canada 2; Sweden 1; Chile 1; Hungary 1; Italy 1; Netherlands 1; Germany 1; Austria 1; Finland 1 | Universities 32; Hospitals 4; hospital /university collaboration 17; university / primate centre collaboration 1; pharmaceutical and hospital/ university collaboration 1; veterinary college 1 | 1971–2004 | |
| USA 63; Japan 18; Germany 14; Canada 4; France 4; Belgium 2; South Korea 1; Turkey 1; Switzerland 1 | Universities 45; hospitals 6; hospital / university collaboration 16; pharmaceutical company 9; pharmaceutical and university / hospital collaboration 12; independent institute 7; independent institute and university 1; pharmaceutical and independent institute collaboration 1 | 1987–2005 | |
* Hospitals include medical centres
**Several studies involved international collaborations so country totals are greater than the total number of studies
Comparison of dates of animal and human studies.
| Publication dates | Publication dates | Date of clinical systematic review/ meta-analysis | Number of animal studies conducted after treatment effect known in humans | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1967–1997 | 1987–1998 | 1999 | None | |
| 1991–2005 | 1995–1999 | 2002 | 4 studies (1 in 2003; 2 in 2004; 1 in 2005) | |
| 1975–2005 | 1972–2005 | 2005 | None | |
| 1990–2004 | 1994–1997 | 2001 | 3 studies (2 in 2003; 1 in 2004) | |
| 1971–2004 | 1972–2002 | 2006 | None | |
| 1987–2005 | 1981–2002 | 2004 | 4 studies (all in 2005) |
Reporting (n = studies apart from final column).
| No ethical statement reported | Use of anaesthesia not reported | How animals killed not reported | Time of death (post experiment) not reported | Use of painkillers not reported | No welfare information reported | Total number animals used | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 (75%) | 0 | 7 (87%) | 3 (37%) | 7 (87%) | 5 (62%) | 668 | |
| 8 (50%) | 4 (25%) | 7 (44%) | 0 | 16 (100%) | 2 (12%) | 807 | |
| 13 (76%) | 0 | 5 (29%) | 3 (18%) | 16 (94%) | 9 (53%) | 2296 | |
| 10 (56%) | 0 | 3 (17%) | 1 (5%) | 16 (89%) | 12 (67%) | 764 | |
| 38 (68%) | 14 (25%) for caesarean section | 12 (21%) | 4 (7%) [foetuses] | 55 (98%) [mothers] | 41(73%) [mothers] | 16,000 | |
| 30 (31%) | 11 (11%) | 35 (36%) | 10 (10%) | 96 (99%) | 79 (81%) | 6614 | |
* Only 11 of the antenatal corticosteroid studies reported that mothers were killed.
** Total number of animals used in corticosteroid studies likely to be an underestimate due to the poor reporting of animals excluded from studies
***Estimated number
Reported methods of killing animals (n = number of studies).
| Air emboli: n = 1; not reported: n = 7 | |
| Exsanguination: n = 4; CO2 inhalation: n = 3; cardiac puncture: n = 1; euthanasia agent (‘Tanax’): n = 1; not reported: n = 7 | |
| Decapitation: n = 6; CO2 inhalation: n = 1; euthanasia agent (potassium chloride): n = 1; perfusion fixation: n = 1; aorta and pulmonary artery cut: n = 1; rapid freezing (liquid nitrogen): n = 1; left to die: n = 1; not reported: n = 5 | |
| Perfusion fixation: n = 8; euthanasia agent (potassium chloride): n = 3; anaesthesia overdose (pentobarbital): n = 1; rapid freezing (liquid nitrogen): n = 1; decapitation: n = 1; exsanguination: n = 1; not reported: n = 3 | |
| Perfusion fixation: n = 20; anaesthesia overdose (pentobarbital 17; thiamyl sodium 1; thiopental 2): n = 20; decapitation: n = 8; exsanguination: n = 4; rapid freezing: n = 3; euthanasia agents (‘potassium chloride 3, ‘Terminal’ 1, KAX cocktail 1): n = 5; brains removed: n = 3; C02 inhalation: n = 2; missing: n = 1; not reported: n = 35 | |
| Anaesthesia overdose: n = 39; perfusion fixation: n = 29; decapitation: n = 22; tracheal blockage: n = 19; euthanasia agent: n = 15; exsanguination: n = 9; left to die: n = 7; CO2 inhalation: n = 6; rapid freezing: n = 5; miscellaneous (air emboli, aorta and pulmonary artery cut, cardiac puncture, suffocation, thoracotomy): n = 5; strangulation: n = 4; brains removed: n = 3; missing: n = 1; not reported: n = 69 |
* Studies could use more than one means of death
Summary results of severity assessment by expert panel.
| Animal model | Summary of scorers’ assessments | Final summary |
|---|---|---|
| Antifibrinolytics to promote blood clotting and control bleeding | The study of the shortest duration (2-6h) was generally assessed as moderate, with two scoring it as mild. The study lasting 24 hours had a spread of scores from mild, through moderate to severe, two scoring moderate on condition that bleeding was limited and analgesia given. Studies lasting 5–10 days: the first involved cutting the tail under anaesthesia and again produced a spread of scores from mild through moderate to severe. The study that involved rabbits having renal injuries inflicted under anaesthesia with 5–10 day follow up was mostly scored as severe. | Studies scored from mild to severe |
| Bisphosphonates to slow down /prevent bone loss | Most scorers felt the general model was of moderate severity, but rising to the severe category as the duration of the study increased and if no analgesia was used. One scorer consistently categorised procedures as less severe than other scorers for this study. | Mostly moderate, some severe |
| Corticosteroids to reduce intracranial pressure after traumatic brain injury | In general this model was scored as severe. In cases where animals were not anaesthetised or only lightly anaesthetised all scorers categorised procedures as severe. Endpoints were from 2h up to 30 days. Most endpoints were categorised as severe except for studies of the shortest duration which two scorers categorised as moderate as long as anaesthesia was used. For studies lasting 2–4 weeks all but one scorer categorised harms as severe. | Mostly severe |
| Tirilazad to protect brain tissue after stroke | The overall model was categorised as severe. Variations of the model were all categorised as severe, except for one study that reported post-operative analgesia; this was categorised as generally severe still, but potentially as less severe. | Severe |
| Antenatal corticosteroids to reduce neonatal mortality and morbidity in preterm babies | For the overall model scorers categorised harms to the mother as moderate to severe, depending on use of analgesia/ anaesthesia. For the overall model the scorers categorised harms to the foetus as generally severe, particularly if the foetus survived beyond birth and had no anaesthesia/ analgesia. For the administration of drugs to the mother scorers generally categorised this as moderate to mild. For the administration of drug to neonates after delivery, scorers categorised this as severe, particularly if neonates not anaesthetised. For administration of the drug to the foetus in utero scorers categorised the procedures to the foetus as severe if no anaesthesia was used (otherwise mild), and moderate to severe for the mother. For administration of the drug via the mother this was categorised as moderate to severe for the mother and moderate to severe for the foetus. For neonates having mechanical ventilation after delivery scorers categorised this as severe, or moderate if anaesthesia was used. In terms of endpoints, scorers categorised harms for those killed in utero and at delivery as moderate; as moderate to severe for deaths post-delivery (30 mins to 6 days), with increasing severity scores as time post-delivery increased. Harms to neonates left to die with no endpoint were categorised as severe by 5/6 scorers (animals found dead should automatically score as ‘severe’). Neonates having ventilation were scored as experiencing moderate to severe harms unless they were anaesthetised, with severity scores increasing with the amount of time spent on the ventilator. | Foetuses and neonates: mostly moderate to severe |
| Thrombolytics (tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA) to dissolve clot/ improve blood flow after stroke | In general scorers categorised the stroke model as severe. Some commented that if anaesthesia/ analgesia were used and duration of study brief, then studies might score less severely. Scorers categorised studies that induced stroke while animals were awake as severe. Most categorised relatively short term studies (up to 33h) that induced stroke under anaesthesia as severe. Most categorised studies that induced stroke under anaesthesia and then involved repeated MRI scans as severe. | Mostly severe |
Summary of harms.
| Endpoint range | No. | Noteworthy harms reported | Total no. animals (species) | Average no. animals per study | No. studies reporting welfare information | No. studies reporting ethical statement | Severity classification by expert panel | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 hrs– 10 days | 0 | 668 (rats, rabbits, pigs) | 83 | 3 (38%) | 2 (25%) | Ranged from mild to severe | ||
| 4 weeks– 2 years | 1 (6%) | 807 (rats, baboons) | 50 | 14 (88%) | 8 (50%) | Mostly moderate, some severe | ||
| 2 hrs– 30 days | 9 (53%) | Some animals had no or only light anaesthesia prior to restraint and head injury. Some animals left to die of injuries. | 2296 (mice, rats, guinea pigs, cats, monkeys) | 135 | 8 (47%) | 4 (24%) | Mostly severe | |
| 3 hrs– 7 days | 3 (17%) | Some iatrogenic deaths. Many animals had repeated daily assessments post-surgery, suggesting cumulative harms | 764 (rats, rabbits, cats) | 42 | 6 (33%) | 8 (44%) | Severe | |
| 0 hrs– 6 days (neonate) | 20 (36%) | Most studies did not report neonatal anaesthesia. Some neonatal upper airway leaks during tracheal tube placement, also pneumothoraces. Some neonates left to die. | 16,000, (mothers, neonates) Sheep, rabbits, rats, monkeys, baboons, cows | 286 | Mothers 15 (27%) | 18 (32%) | Mostly moderate to severe for both mothers and neonates | |
| 6 hrs– 2 months | 37 (38%) | Some animals had stroke induced while conscious and restrained / paralysed. Many had repeated daily assessments and scans, suggesting cumulative harms. | 6614 (rats, rabbits, mice, guinea pigs, squirrel monkeys, baboons) | 68 | 18 (19%) | 67 (69%) | Mostly severe |
Clinical relevance.
| Concordance | In clinical use | |
|---|---|---|
Citation scores.
| Intervention | No. studies | Total no. citations | Average citation score | Research quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antifibrinolytics | 8 | 83 | 10 | Poor |
| Bisphosphonates | 16 | 1213 | 76 | Poor |
| Corticosteroids | 17 | 610 | 36 | Poor |
| Tirilizad | 18 | 820 | 45 | Poor |
| Antenatal corticosteroids | 56 | 2483 | 44 | Poor |
| Thrombolytics | 97 | 5370 | 55 | Poor |
Citation scores related to clinical relevance.
| Concordance | In clinical use | Average citation score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Discordant | Yes | 10 | |
| Discordant: | No | 36 | |
| Discordant: | No | 45 | |
| Partially concordant: | Yes | 44 | |
| Concordant: | Yes | 55 | |
| Concordant: | Yes | 76 |
Fig 2HBA using Bateson’s cube.