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Alternative approaches and animal use in pharmaceutical industry

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Council of Europe Convention ETS123, Appendix A. Specific ... Standardisation of animal care and hygiene. International harmonisation of testing requirements ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alternative approaches and animal use in pharmaceutical industry


1
Alternative approaches and animal use in
pharmaceutical industry
Wolfgang Hartwig Executive Vice President
Global Head of RD Bayer
2
Use of animals in pharmaceutical RD
As long as there are unmet medical needs
Pharmaceutical industrys role is to develop and
provide patients with innovative, safe and
efficient medicines. For ethical, scientific and
regulatory reasons and despite significant
technological progress, currently this mission is
dependent upon studies in animals. Whenever
performing studies in animals pharmaceutical
industry fully applies the 3Rs principle
refinement, reduction, replacement.
3
Laws and Ethics
  • Pharmaceutical RD is highly regulated
  • Pharmaceutical legislation and guidelines impose
    use of animals
  • World Medical Association Ethical principles for
    medical research involving human subject
  • The ethical use of animals in research is also
    highly regulated
  • EU Directive on Protection of Vertebrates used
    for Scientific and other Experimental Purposes
    (86/609/EEC)
  • Council of Europe Convention ETS123, Appendix A
  • Specific guidelines at EU and national level

4
Alternatives are good business
  • Using animals is expensive, resource intensive
    and time consuming
  • Alternatives, where accepted, offer many
    advantages
  • Low Costs
  • Low amounts of testing material needed
  • High throughput testing possible
  • Easy to perform studies

5
Alternatives are good business, however
  • They do not mimick the complexity of an intact
    organism, e.g. the functional network of more
    than 200 differentiated cell types
  • They are poor predictors for chronic effects.

6
Three Rs
Russell and Burch
  • Replacement
  • Reduction
  • Refinement

7
Evolution in technologies led to paradigm shift
in RD
In vivo Tests Pharmacology
gt 30 years ago
8
Dramatic increase in screening compounds
9
Only a limited number of compounds is tested in
animals
gt 1000000 Screening Assay
Isolated Target
10000 in vitro testing
Cellular Systems
100 in vitro testing
In vitro ADME and TOX
5 in vivo testing
Animal testing
10
Specific examples for reducing the number of
animal tests
11
Many alternatives have been developed already and
are used by Pharmaceutical Industry
  • - In vitro models for
  • in depth profiling of activity, kinetics and
    metabolism
  • general cytotoxicity
  • hepatotoxicity
  • nephrotoxicity
  • neurotoxicity
  • bone marrow toxicity
  • endocrine toxicity
  • - Embryonal stem cell test (EST) for
    teratogenicity
  • - Phototoxicity (3T3 NRU)
  • - Photogenotoxicity (Photo MNT, Photo Comet)
  • - Cardiac toxicity (HERG)

12
Modern in vitro toxicological testing strategy
Are there structural alerts? Can potential
toxicities be predicted based on mode of action?
in silico
First Safety Assessment
Genes
Genotoxicity Ames, Cytogene-tics in
vitro, Cardiotoxicity hERG Assay in
vitro, General toxicity cytotoxicity in
vitro, others (e.g. omics) if appropriate
Cells
Tox Profiling in vitro
tissues
Second Safety Assessment
Only compounds which have passed these hurdles
are tested in animals
13
Some replacement methods have also been accepted
by regulators
  • All accepted methods target only acute effects
  • - 3T3 NRU Phototoxicity test
  • - Skin corrosivity test
  • - HERG Assay
  • Together with all stakeholders the goal of
    pharmaceutical industry is to broaden the number
    of validated and accepted alternative methods
  • In particular, support of regulatory authorities
    is needed here

14
Three Rs
  • Replacement
  • Reduction
  • Refinement

15
Reduction of animal numbers in research
  • Better designed studies
  • More data from one animal study
  • Defined animal strains and transgenic animals are
    used
  • Refined in-life analysis empowered by genomics
    (DNA-Chips), proteomics and metabonomics
    (Biomarker)
  • Enhanced data interpretation by bioinformatics
    and cheminformatics
  • Standardisation of animal care and hygiene

16
Reduction of animal numbers in toxicological
studies
  • International harmonisation of testing
    requirements
  • no duplication of studies due to geographical
    differences in testing requirements
  • some obsolete tests, e.g. LD50, replaced by more
    sophisticated endpoints
  • Optimisation of study design
  • combination of different endpoints in one study
    (e.g. inclusion of safety pharmacology parameters
    in toxicological studies)
  • Tailored toxicological programs

17
Examples for reduction of animal tests
  • Improved study design
  • Up to 75 reduction in specific areas like
    osteoporosis and cancer pain models
  • Flexible and focussed testing strategies
  • Tailored toxicological program to support a
    limited number of clinical doses in man
    (exploratory IND) saves 30 animals as
    compared to the conventional approach

18
Three Rs
  • Replacement
  • Reduction
  • Refinement

19
Refinementsanimal models
  • Animal Care
  • Excellent control of the macro environment
  • Health surveillance programmes
  • Extensive staff training
  • Social and complex housing
  • Animal models
  • Using telemetry techniques
  • Non invasive imaging
  • Non invasive blood pressure
  • Improvement in anaestesia protocols and post op
    care
  • Specialist staff

20
Conclusion
  • Evolution of technologies in drug discovery and
    development contributes to a continuous
    replacement, reduction and refinement of the
    number of animal tests.
  • Improved study design and focussed testing
    strategies help to reduce the animal numbers.
  • Despite all efforts, studies in animals still
    play a significant role in Pharmas mission to
    provide innovative and safe medicines for complex
    diseases.
  • Pharmaceutical industry recognizes the importance
    of highest possible ethical standards in animal
    welfare where animal testing is still necessary.
    Moreover, it strives together will all
    stakeholders to continuously reduce the number of
    animal tests.
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