The Impact of Common Recovery Blood Sampling Methods, in Mice (Mus Musculus), on Well-Being and Sample Quality: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Eligibility Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Study Selection
2.4. Assessment of Methodological Quality
2.5. Data Extraction
2.6. Data Synthesis
2.7. Assessing Certainty in the Findings
3. Results
3.1. Description of Studies
3.2. Note on Terminology
3.3. Animal Welfare Outcomes
3.4. Physiological Measures
3.5. Clinical and Pathological Parameters
3.6. Behavioural Measures
3.7. Blood Sample Quality Measures
4. Methodological Quality
4.1. Selection Bias
4.2. Performance Bias
4.3. Detection Bias
4.4. Attrition Bias
4.5. Reporting Bias
4.6. Other Bias
5. Effects of the Interventions
5.1. Mortality
5.2. Adverse Events
5.3. Histology
5.4. Behavioural Tests of Anxiety
5.4.1. Elevated Plus Maze (EPM)
5.4.2. Open Field Test (OFT)
6. Discussion
6.1. Impact of Blood Sample Route on Mouse Welfare
6.2. Evidence Completeness and Quality and Recommendations for Future Research
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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The Effects of Various Phlebotomy Techniques for Animals Welfare-Related Outcomes | |||
---|---|---|---|
Patient or Population: Laboratory Mice Used for Research Purposes Interventions of Interest: Sublingual Sampling, Retrobulbar Sampling, Facial Vein Sampling, Tail Amputation Sampling, Tail Incision Sampling, Tail Vein Sampling and Saphenous Vein Sampling | |||
Outcomes | Impact | Number of Participants (Studies) | Certainty of the Evidenc (GRADE) |
Plasma Glucose Concentration | |||
Single Sampling | The facial vein technique was involved in the most pairwise comparisons synthesised, and was found to have a beneficial effect when compared to the tail amputation and the tail incision techniques. The tail incision technique was likewise considered to be beneficial compared to the tail amputation method. The retrobulbar technique was considered beneficial to the tail vein technique, and the sublingual technique beneficial to the facial vein technique. | (3 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,b,c |
Serial Sampling | The retrobulbar technique was involved in 4 pairwise comparisons and was considered harmful compared to the tail amputation and the tail incision methods. Yet it was beneficial when compared to the facial vein method. Tail amputation was similarly beneficial over the tail incision technique, and the saphenous technique was beneficial compared to the tail vein technique. | (3 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,c,d |
Plasma Corticosterone Concentration | |||
Single Sampling | The retrobulbar technique proved to be more beneficial compared to the facial vein technique in two studies, beneficial to the tail vein and saphenous methods in one study each, yet harmful when compared to the tail incision technique based on the results from one study. Neither a harmful or beneficial effect was observed comparing the facial vein and the tail vein method; the tail amputation and the saphenous technique; or the tail vein and the tail incision method. | (5 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,e,f |
Serial Sampling | The tail amputation technique was considered beneficial in two pairwise comparisons against the retrobulbar technique, and beneficial in a pairwise comparison against the facial vein technique. However, no difference was observed when compared with the saphenous vein technique. Likewise, the saphenous vein technique was considered beneficial when compared against both the retrobulbar and the facial vein technique. | (3 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,e,g |
Faecal Corticosterone | |||
Serial Sampling | There appears to be a time-dependent factor for the pairwise comparison of the retrobulbar technique and the tail incision technique. While the tail vein was shown to be beneficial compared to the facial vein. | (4 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,h,i |
Body Weight | |||
Single Sampling | The saphenous vein technique was considered ‘beneficial’ in pairwise comparisons with the sublingual, retrobulbar, facial, tail amputation and tail incision methods. This technique was not considered ‘harmful’ in any pairwise comparison synthesised. The next most beneficial technique synthesised was the sublingual technique, which was considered beneficial in two separate comparisons made to the facial vein technique, and single comparisons made to the retrobulbar; tail amputation and tail incision techniques. The tail amputation technique was beneficial over the retrobulbar; facial vein and the tail incision methods. The retrobulbar and facial vein methods were associated with the most harm, as compared through pairwise comparison. | (5 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW a,j |
Serial Sampling | The retrobulbar technique was considered beneficial in two separate pairwise comparisons made to the facial vein technique, as well as being beneficial when compared to the sublingual technique. | (3 RCTs) | ⨁◯◯◯ VERY LOW k,l |
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence: High certainty: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect. Moderate certainty: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different. Low certainty: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect. Very low certainty: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect. |
Author | Strain | Sex | Age at Intervention | Animals per Group | Study Design | Intervention | Accompanying Conditions | Frequency of Intervention (Occasions) | Comparator | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aasland et al. 2010 [22] | C57BL/6JBomTac | M | NR | n = 8 | RCT (crossover) | Saphenous vein Tail vein | N/A | 4 by both methods at 2 weeks apart | Each other Time series | Plasma glucose Hemolysis |
Abatan et al. 2008 [9] | ICR | F | NR | n = 8–13 (unclear from methods) | RCT | Saphenous vein Tail tip amputation | N/A | One-off collection Serial sample at 2–3 day intervals (4) | Each other Time series | Plasma corticosterone Behaviours noted during blood collection |
Christensen et al. 2009 [23] | C57BL/6JBom | M | NR | n = 20 | RCT | All sample methods were performed at 21 and 30 °C, i.e., 8 experimental groups Retrobulbar Tail incision Tail tip amputation Tail tip puncture | N/A | Serial sample at 30 min intervals (4) | Other groups | Blood glucose Haemolysis Clotting |
Durschlag et al. 1996 [24] | ICR | M | 9 weeks | n = 8 | Case report | Tail incision | N/A | Serial sample at 2–3 day intervals (5) | Time series | Histology Plasma corticosterone |
Fernandez et al. 2009 [25] | C57BL/6J | M | 6 weeks | n = 10 | RCT (crossover) | Retrobulbar Facial vein | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | Serial sample at 6–8 week intervals (3) | Each other | Blood glucose Haemolysis |
Forbes et al. 2010 [26] | Balb/c | F | 6–8 weeks | n = 214 | Retrospective case series | Facial vein | Lancet or needle for sampling | Serial sample at 2–7 day intervals (6) | Nil | Mortality |
Francisco et al. 2015 [27] | BALB/c | F | 5 weeks | n = 20 | RCT | Facial vein (lancet or needle) | Facial vein route with anaesthesia as one group | One-off collection | Other groups | Adverse events Gross post-mortem site evaluation |
Fried et al. 2015 [28] | C57BL/6N background with a mutation in MDA5 | M/F | 4–6 months | n = 8 | RCT | Retrobulbar | Anaesthesia | One-off collection | Time series at 0, 1, 3, 7 or 14 days after sampling | Clinical scores Histology |
Frolich et al. 2018 [29] | C57BL/6NCrl | F | 12–14 weeks | n = 12 | RCT | Retrobulbar Facial vein | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | One-off collection Serial sample at 1 wk intervals (6) | Each otherSingle versus serial | Adverse events Mortality Bodyweight Histology Plasma glucose |
Gjendal et al. 2020 [30] | C57BL/6 | F | 10 weeks | n = 30 | RCT | Retrobulbar Facial vein Sublingual | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) Facial vein and sublingual anaesthesia groups, in addition to conscious sampling | Serial sample at days 8, 9, and 10 (short protocol) and days 8, 15, and 22 (long protocol) | Eachother Single versus serial | Nest build score Faecal corticosteroid metabolites Bodyweight Haemolysis Clotting Gross post-mortem site evaluation |
Harikrishnan et al. 2018 [12] | C57BL/6NTac | M/F | 6 weeks | n = 12 | RCT | Retrobulbar Sublingual Facial vein Tail incision | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | Serial sample at 24 h interval (2) | Other groups, plus isoflurane control, and behavioural test control (naïve animals) | Nest build score Elevated plus maze Open field test Faecal corticosteroid metabolites |
Heimann et al. 2009 [4] | Crl: CD-1 [CR] | M/F | 11 weeks | n = 30 | RCT | Sublingual Retrobulbar | Anaesthesia | One-off collection | Each other | Histology |
Heimann et al. 2010 [1] | CD1 | F | 14 weeks | n = 18 | RCT | Sublingual Facial vein | Anaesthesia (for sublingual and one facial vein group) | One-off collection | Other groups, time series at 3 h, two or five days after sampling | Bodyweight Food intake Histology Blood glucose |
Kim et al. 2018 [10] | CD-1 C57BL/6 | M | NR | n = 4–6 | RCT | Retrobulbar Tail tip amputation | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) Restrain/unrestrained | One-off collection Serial sample tail tip groups at 30 min intervals (5) | Other groupsTime series | Plasma corticosterone |
Madetoja et al. 2009 [31] | Hsdwin:NMRI | F | 9 weeks | n = 10 | RCT | Saphenous vein Facial vein Tail vein | Tail warming heat lamp | One-off collection | Other groups, and control with no blood samples | Plasma corticosterone Plasma ACTH |
Moore et al. 2017 [32] | C57BL/6J | M | 10–12 weeks | n = 8–12 | RCT | Facial vein Tail tip amputation Tail incision | N/A | One-off collection | Other groups, and sham submandibular and tail tip amputation (just restraint) | Blood glucose Audible vocalisations Post-procedural epochs of inactivity Grooming behaviour Nest build score Elevated plus maze Open field test Histology |
Regan et al. 2016 [33] | CD1 | F | 12–13 weeks | n = 15 | RCT | Retrobulbar Facial vein Submental | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | Serial sample at 2 week intervals (3) | Other groups | Adverse events Bodyweight Extraneous blood loss Gross post-mortem site evaluation Haemolysis Clotting |
Rogers et al. 1999 [34] | Study 1 (single sample) C57BL/6 | F | 10–12 weeks | n = 72 | RCT (crossover) | Retrobulbar | Thermostatic warming chamber | One-off collection (each method) | Each other | Plasma glucose |
Study 2 (repeated sample) C57BL/6 | F | 10–12 weeks | n = 48 | Tail incision | Serial sample at 1 week interval (2) | Plasma insulin | ||||
Sadler et al. 2013 [7] | Study 1 (single sample) BALB/CAnNCrl Study 2 (repeated sample) BALB/CAnNCrl | M M | 7–8 weeks 3–4 weeks | n = 5 n = 4/5 | RCT | Tail incision Tail vein Tail incision | Thermostatic warming chamber Tail dipped hot water | One-off collection Serial sample at 24 h intervals (3) | Other groups Time series | Plasma corticosterone |
Shirasaki et al. 2012 [35] | ICR C57BL/6N | M | 6 weeks | n = 10 (unclear from methods) | RCT | Jugular Tail incision | N/A | One-off collection Serial sample at 24 h intervals (5) | Each other Time series | Plasma CRP Plasma corticosterone Plasma haemoglobin Hematocrit Plasma thrombin–antithrombin complexes |
Sorenson et al. 2019 [36] | C57BL/6NTac | F | 8 weeks | n = 36 | RCT | Retrobulbar Saphenous Sublingual Facial vein Tail incision Tail tip amputation | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | One-off collection | Each other, plus isoflurane control and naïve animals (no bleeding) Time series at nine timepoints: 6 or 10 h or 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, or 12 days after sampling | Bodyweight Stomach contents Plasma corticosterone Inflammatory gene expression at sample site Plasma inflammatory markers (haptoglobin and IL1ß) Histology |
Tabata et al. 1998 [37] | Study 1 (single sample) B6C3Fl/ICR Study 2 (repeated sample) B6C3Fl | M/F M/F | 8 weeks 9 weeks | n = 12 n = 20 | RCT | Tail tip amputation | Tube restraint or anaesthetized with ether or pentobarbital § | One-off collection Serial sample at varied intervals for 24 h (8) | Other groups Time series | Plasma glucose |
Teilmann et al. 2014a [2] | BomTac:NMRI | M | 6–8 weeks | n = 8–18 | RCT | Facial vein Tail vein | N/A | Two day and two night samples within 24 h (4) | Other groups, plus controls (no blood sample and naïve animals as behavioural control) | Bodyweight Plasma corticosterone Faecal corticosteroid metabolites Triple test (elevated plus maze, open field test, light–dark box) |
Teilmann et al. 2014 [38] | C57BL/6J | M | 5 months | n = 8–12 | RCT | Retrobulbar Facial vein | N/A | One-off collection | Other group, plus control (no blood sample) | Bodyweight Plasma corticosterone Histology |
Tsai et al. 2015 [8] | BALB/cO1aHsd | F | 8 weeks | n = 12 | RCT | Jugular Retrobulbar (with and without anaesthesia) Saphenous Facial vein Tail vein | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar group and jugular) | One-off collection | Other groups | In-cage activity Plasma corticosterone Open field test Histology |
Tuli et al. 1995 [11] | Study 1 (acute stress) BALB/c/Ola Study 2 (tail bleeding recovery) BALB/c/Ola | M M | 5–6 months 5–6 months | n = 5 n = 5 | RCT | Tail tip amputation | Tail dipped hot water | One-off collection each route Serial humane killing at day 2, 4 and 8 after blood sample | Other groups and control with no tail amputation | Plasma corticosterone Adrenal weight Spleen weight |
Voigt et al. 2013 [13] | C57BL/6CrlN | F | 4–6 months | n = 36 (16 contributed to final results due to technical failure) | RCT (crossover) | Blood-sucking bug Retrobulbar Tail incision | Anaesthesia (retrobulbar) | One-off collection each route (note crossover design) | Other groups | Faecal corticosteroid metabolites |
Study | Random Sequence Generation | Baseline Characteristics | Allocation Concealment | Random Housing | Blinding | Random Outcome Assessment | Blinding | Incomplete Outcome Data | Selective Outcome Reporting | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aasland et al. 2010 [22] | L | L | H | L | H | L | L | L | L | H |
Abatan et al. 2008 [9] | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | L |
Christensen et al. 2009 [23] | L | L | H | H | H | H | L | H | L | H |
Durschlag et al. 1996 [24] | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | H |
Fernandez et al. 2009 [25] | L | H | H | L | H | L | L | H | L | L |
Forbes et al. 2010 [26] | H | U | H | H | H | H | H | L | H | H |
Francisco et al. 2015 [27] | L | L | L | H | H | L | H | L | L | H |
Fried et al. 2015 [28] | U | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | L |
Frolich et al. 2018 [29] | U | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | L |
Gjendal et al. 2020 [30] | L | L | H | L | H | H | L | L | L | L |
Harikishnan et al. 2018 [12] | L | L | H | L | H | L | H | L | L | L |
Heimann et al. 2009 [4] | U | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Heimann et al. 2010 [1] | U | L | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Kim et al. 2018 [10] | H | U | H | H | H | L | L | U | L | L |
Madetoja et al. 2009 [31] | H | L | U | H | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Moore et al. 2017 [32] | U | H | H | L | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Regan et al. 2016 [33] | H | H | H | H | H | H | H | U | L | H |
Rogers et al. 1999 [34] | L | H | H | H | H | L | L | L | L | H |
Sadler et al. 2013 [7] | H | U | H | H | H | L | L | U | L | L |
Shirasaki et al. 2012 [35] | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | U | L | H |
Sorenson et al. 2019 [36] | U | H | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Tabata 1998 [37] | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | L | H | H |
Teilmann et al. 2014a [2] | U | L | L | H | H | H | H | L | L | L |
Teilmann et al. 2014b [38] | U | L | L | L | H | U | U | L | L | L |
Tsai et al. 2015 [8] | U | L | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | H |
Tuli et al. 1995 [11] | U | H | H | H | H | H | L | L | L | L |
Voigt et al. 2013 [13] | L | U | H | L | H | L | L | L | L | H |
Single-Sample Method and Reference | Behaviour Test | Measure | General Direction of Effect on Measure | Timeframe for Measure |
---|---|---|---|---|
Retrobulbar | ||||
Harikrishnan et al. 2018 [12] | EPM | Anxiety | ↑ | 24 h |
OFT | Anxiety | ↑ | 24 h | |
OFT | Locomotor activity | ↓ | 24 h | |
Facial Vein | ||||
Harikrishnan et al. 2018 [12] | EPM | Anxiety | = | 24 h |
OFT | Anxiety | = | 24 h | |
OFT | Locomotor activity | = | 24 h | |
Moore et al. 2017 [32] | EPM | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural |
OFT | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural | |
Teilmann et al. 2014 [2] | Triple Test | Anxiety | ↑ | 24 h |
Sublingual | ||||
Harikrishnan et al. 2018 [12] | EPM | Anxiety | ↑ | 24 h |
OFT | Anxiety | = | 24 h | |
OFT | Locomotor activity | ↓ | 24 h | |
Tail Incision | ||||
Harikrishnan et al. 2018 [12] | EPM | Anxiety | ↑ | 24 h |
OFT | Anxiety | = | 24 h | |
OFT | Locomotor activity | = | 24 h | |
Moore et al. 2017 [32] | EPM | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural |
OFT | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural | |
Tail Vein | ||||
Teilmann et al. 2014 [2] | Triple Test | Anxiety | ↓ | 24 h |
Tail Amputation | ||||
Moore et al. 2017 [32] | EPM | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural |
OFT | Anxiety | = | Few hours post-procedural |
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Whittaker, A.L.; Barker, T.H. The Impact of Common Recovery Blood Sampling Methods, in Mice (Mus Musculus), on Well-Being and Sample Quality: A Systematic Review. Animals 2020, 10, 989. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10060989
Whittaker AL, Barker TH. The Impact of Common Recovery Blood Sampling Methods, in Mice (Mus Musculus), on Well-Being and Sample Quality: A Systematic Review. Animals. 2020; 10(6):989. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10060989
Chicago/Turabian StyleWhittaker, Alexandra L, and Timothy H Barker. 2020. "The Impact of Common Recovery Blood Sampling Methods, in Mice (Mus Musculus), on Well-Being and Sample Quality: A Systematic Review" Animals 10, no. 6: 989. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10060989
APA StyleWhittaker, A. L., & Barker, T. H. (2020). The Impact of Common Recovery Blood Sampling Methods, in Mice (Mus Musculus), on Well-Being and Sample Quality: A Systematic Review. Animals, 10(6), 989. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10060989