Developing Recommendations for Cumulative Endpoints and Lifetime Use for Research Animals
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Scoping Survey about Frequency of Use, Lifetime Use, and Cumulative Use Considerations for Research Animals
2.1. Survey Methods
2.2. Data Analysis
2.3. Results
2.3.1. Respondent Demographics
2.3.2. Institutional Endpoint Policy and Disposition of Animals at Study Conclusion
2.3.3. Quality of Life and Lifetime Use Decision Making
2.3.4. Consideration of Cumulative Use of Animals—Refinement vs. Reduction
2.3.5. Interest in Cumulative and Lifetime Use Guidelines at an Institutional Level
- “I think balance and good benefit/cost analysis is needed, we cannot create guidelines for a broad range of experiments and animal species. Each study needs a singular evaluation, discussion, and reflection from the Animal Welfare Body”.
- “I think blanket policies may be inappropriate, and instead there might need to be some general guidelines that can be applied on a case by case basis directly within protocols where all the details can be considered independently”.
- “I am always concerned that policies, while good as guidelines, may limit the ability for the veterinarian or IACUC to utilize professional judgment in deciding the fate of individual animals”.
- “The approach should be a whole animal assessment by a cross-disciplinary team”.
- “Principal investigators are strongly discouraged from advocating animal reuse as a reduction strategy, and reduction should not be a rationale for reusing animals or animals that have already undergone experimental procedures especially if the well-being of the animals would be compromised. My opinion is that you should strive for minimal suffering per individual animal even in the cost of using more animals”.
- “Committees should come up with objective criteria for the maximum number of lifetime procedures—similar to consideration for multiple major survival surgeries currently required by USDA—for a variety of procedures and apply those criteria to animals on a single study and then carefully weigh what should be allowable”.
2.4. Discussion
3. Relevant Cumulative Endpoint Guidance for Research Animals from Regulatory and Compliance Authorities
3.1. Ethical Review of Protocols by an AEC and/or Authority
3.2. Classifications of Major vs. Minor Surgical Procedures
3.3. Prospective Assessment of Severity/Invasiveness of Procedures and/or Protocol
3.4. Retrospective Assessment of Actual Severity of Procedures and/or Protocol
3.5. Establishment of Humane Endpoints for Research
4. Tools for Assessment of Animal Welfare
4.1. Animal Welfare Assessment Technique
4.1.1. The Five Domains
4.1.2. Extended Animal Welfare Assessment Grid
4.1.3. Biomarker Analysis
4.1.4. Quality of Life Assessments
4.1.5. Applying Technology to Animal Welfare Assessments
5. Recommendations for Cumulative and Lifetime Use of Animals Maintained for Teaching, Testing, and Research
5.1. Institutional Policy to Assess Cumulative Endpoints
5.2. Determination of Threshold Criteria
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Question | Response | % of Respondents |
---|---|---|
Geographic region | USA | 50.0 |
E.U. | 24.0 | |
Canada | 9.7 | |
Asia | 3.9 | |
Latin America | 0.7 | |
Other | 22.7 | |
Age range | 18–25 | 0 |
26–35 | 27.5 | |
36–45 | 27.5 | |
46–55 | 25.5 | |
56–65 | 16.9 | |
Over 65 | 2.6 | |
Gender | Male | 33.3 |
Female | 66.7 | |
Institution type | University/College | 60.5 |
Industry | 5.3 | |
Contract Research Organization | 3.9 | |
Research Hospital | 7.2 | |
Government | 9.8 | |
NGO or Non-Profit | 4.6 | |
Sanctuary | 0 | |
Other | 8.6 | |
Primary job function | Veterinarian | 58.2 |
Veterinary Technician | 5.9 | |
Animal Care | 5.9 | |
Researcher | 3.3 | |
Compliance | 4.6 | |
Species worked with | Mouse | 77.7 |
Rat | 68.8 | |
Rabbit | 58.0 | |
Pig | 57.1 | |
Non-Human Primate | 44.6 | |
Fish | 41.1 | |
Dog | 36.6 | |
Poultry | 26.8 | |
Cat | 25.8 | |
Other Rodent | 40.2 | |
Livestock | 38.4 | |
Teaching Animals | 34.8 | |
Other Birds | 22.3 | |
Other | 18.8 |
Considerations | Responses (%) |
---|---|
My institutional AEC has a guidance document for determining animal disposition at study end that includes the use of objective metrics, such as number of studies conducted with animal, number of needle sticks, number of study days, protocol invasiveness, total blood volume provided over a lifetime, etc. | 36.3 |
My institutional AEC has established adoption and/or retirement criteria for a species, regardless of study use (e.g., based on animal age, time in facility, etc.). | 25.0 |
My facility has an assessment protocol for scoring animals exhibiting aversive behaviors to procedures (e.g., vocalization during blood collection, excessive trembling, struggling). | 31.8 |
My institutional AEC periodically discusses quality of life of aging and long-term housed research and teaching animals. | 73.6 |
Animal care and veterinary personnel at my facility regularly review quality of life and endpoint decision making for aging and long-term housed research and teaching animals. | 18.7 |
Area of Protocol Review | Example | Possible Suggestions for Protocol Authors by AEC Reviewers |
---|---|---|
Multiplicity of procedures | Teaching animals in an animal science or veterinary medicine program | Consideration for inanimate models for skills development—use to replace some or all of procedures. When live animals are a required component of training programs, consideration of maintaining higher numbers to permit using animals at lower frequency (as well as inclusion of refinements to reduce welfare impact). |
Colony or herd animals that are pooled for potential research use, e.g., ponies and horses maintained as a research herd | Define a maximum time that animals can remain in herd or colony. Retire or rehome animals once this timeline has been met. | |
Scarce or special resource animals maintained as a colony and reused on studies | Clear treatment plans for maintenance of quality of life based on health conditions. Define a maximum number of studies an individual can be enrolled in. Define maximum number of minor surgeries. Define maximum number of anesthetic events. Define a lifetime maximum number of protocols in the moderate and severe welfare impact categories. | |
Frequency of use | MRI imaging of animal with tumors under general anesthesia 2 x/week for multiple weeks | Try to limit imaging to most critical time points, provide extra food treats and high energy foods to offset weight loss from fasting. |
Repeated studies of blood sampling for pharmacokinetic analyses | Habituate animals to bleeding, train for voluntary blood collection, when possible, counter condition animals with food treats, define a maximum period of time that animals are maintained in PK colony, rehome or adopt at study end. | |
Intensity of use | Pharmacokinetic study with 12 time points in 24 h | Discuss expected PK results and test article half-life to determine most critical times. Ensure maximum blood volumes are not exceeded. Encourage microsampling and use of peripheral veins and replacement of fluids. Consider catheterization (temporary or permanent) for some/all of blood collections. Discuss effects of repeated or prolonged restraint stress. |
Collecting body weights of rodent pups daily for first 2 weeks of life | Encourage surrogate forms of monitoring for pup wellness, such as presence of milk spot, and body color. | |
Dosing animals with test article 2 or >times daily | Train animals to procedures and voluntary ingestion, if possible, counter condition with special resources, treats, and human interaction time, look for possible refinements, such as use of mini-pump, to avoid repeated handling/restraint stress. | |
Duration of use | Multi-year protocols with fistulated cows | Establish clear goals for studies and determine duration of housing for animals that is consistent with current industry practices. |
Blood donor animals kept to support research colonies or for teaching or clinical use at veterinary colleges | Attempt to establish donor animals living in local communities, determine clear duration periods if animals must live in colony/clinic setting, adopt or rehome at end of duration. Define maximum number of donations based on animal personality and response to handling and blood collections over time. | |
Chronic toxicology studies | Have well defined humane endpoints, ensure personnel are trained to recognize, ensure robust behavioral management program is in place (e.g., exercise, food foraging and other resources, and positive human interaction time). Define a maximum number of studies an individual can be enrolled in. | |
Aged rats used in multiple studies to assess longevity therapeutics | Establishment of a program that can evaluate ongoing welfare impacts so that these can be monitored and limited. A concurrent welfare assessment program should additionally be considered and incorporated into the intervention and endpoint determinations. |
Consideration | Indicator |
---|---|
Is the environment appropriate for the individual animal: resource-based measures | Environment allows physical performance of important natural behaviors |
Provision of appropriate housing and husbandry | |
Presence of negative environmental features that might impair welfare | |
General animal-based indicators of stress, illness, pain or discomfort | Altered food and water intake |
Weight change | |
Altered posture | |
Altered grooming behavior | |
Coat condition | |
Chromodacryorrhea | |
Damage to the fur or skin | |
Abnormal repetitive behaviors | |
Altered social behavior | |
Altered activity levels | |
Partially closed, sunken, or dull eyes | |
Altered interactions with humans | |
Altered physiological parameters | |
20 kHz vocalization | |
Fecal corticosterone | |
Animal-based indicators of neutral or positive welfare states | Exploratory behavior |
Grooming | |
Play | |
50 kHz vocalizations | |
Nest building and time to integrate into nest test (TINT test) and nesting consolidation test scoring | |
Indicators for assessing welfare in specific contexts | Facial grimace scale |
Composite pain score | |
Burrowing task | |
Gait score | |
Cornering behavior |
Date | Clinical Health | Procedural Severity | Environmental Quality | Behavioral Assessments | Score | Total Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1/1/20 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 8 |
4/1/20 | 0 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 12 | 20 |
7/1/20 | 4 | 2 | 8 | 4 | 18 | 38 |
10/1/20 | 2 | 8 | 8 | 6 | 24 | 62 |
1/1/21 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 8 | 12 | 74 |
4/1/21 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 8 | 82 |
Category | Description |
---|---|
A good life | The balance of salient positive and negative experiences is strongly positive. Achieved by full compliance with best practices advice well above the minimum requirements of codes of practice or welfare. |
A life worth living | The balance of salient positive and negative experiences is favorable, but less so. Achieved by full compliance with the minimum requirements of code of practice or welfare that include elements which promote some positive experiences. |
Point of balance | The neutral point where salient positive and negative experiences are equally balanced. |
A life worth avoiding | The balance of salient positive and negative experiences is unfavorable but can be remedied rapidly by veterinary treatment or a change in husbandry practices. |
A life not worth living | The balance of salient positive and negative experiences is strongly negative and cannot be remedied rapidly so that euthanasia is the only humane alternative. |
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Nunamaker, E.A.; Davis, S.; O’Malley, C.I.; Turner, P.V. Developing Recommendations for Cumulative Endpoints and Lifetime Use for Research Animals. Animals 2021, 11, 2031. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11072031
Nunamaker EA, Davis S, O’Malley CI, Turner PV. Developing Recommendations for Cumulative Endpoints and Lifetime Use for Research Animals. Animals. 2021; 11(7):2031. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11072031
Chicago/Turabian StyleNunamaker, Elizabeth A., Shawn Davis, Carly I. O’Malley, and Patricia V. Turner. 2021. "Developing Recommendations for Cumulative Endpoints and Lifetime Use for Research Animals" Animals 11, no. 7: 2031. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11072031
APA StyleNunamaker, E. A., Davis, S., O’Malley, C. I., & Turner, P. V. (2021). Developing Recommendations for Cumulative Endpoints and Lifetime Use for Research Animals. Animals, 11(7), 2031. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11072031