World
Day for Laboratory Animals /
ADI
Animal Defenders International
April 2018
World Day for Laboratory Animals was instituted in 1979 and has been a catalyst for the movement to end the suffering of animals in laboratories around the world and their replacement with advanced scientific non-animal techniques. The suffering of millions of animals all over the world is commemorated on every continent.
Although advanced methods are steadily replacing animal research,
outdated laws require animal tests before a product can be put on the
market. Every year millions of animals suffer and die in experiments that
can never be trusted.
As a method of predicting likely effects in humans, animal research is
flawed in three key areas:
Government and agency regulators who are responsible for allowing
products on the market, are used to these standard animal tests and the
estimates and ‘safety’ evaluations drawn from lab animal test results. They
are also aware of the potential for species differences, which may result in
injury to people. Thus, a series of animal tests is followed by human trials
and this is where the problem of species differences can produce unexpected
adverse reactions in people.
Some examples of horrific and unexpected side effects in people, due to
differences in reaction between species include:
BIA 10-2474 Drug Trial. Clinical trials with a new drug,
BIA 10-2474, went fatally wrong – when given to human volunteers – one died,
four showed evidence of brain damage and it has since been reported that
another lost his fingers and toes. The product had been tested on mice,
rats, rabbits, dogs and monkeys for toxic effects on various organs as well
as reproductive toxicity. Monkeys were given doses approx 75x that given to
the human volunteers. See full report here.
TGN1412 – an experimental drug was given to human
volunteers and caused life-threatening reactions, yet monkeys were given
doses 500 times higher than the human volunteers and no side effects had
been seen. This disaster may have been avoided with the implementation of
advanced technologies such as ‘micro dosing’ with spectrometry analysis.
Species Differences
Animal species differ from each other in a number of ways. For example:
Species differences mean that animals used in research can give different results to humans:
Animal use is an outdated method
Advances in science and technology are evolving rapidly, providing
advanced non-animal techniques that are faster, more accurate and of direct
relevance to humans. There are a range of multidisciplinary, sophisticated
techniques that allow the study of the effectiveness and safety of
substances on human tissue in-vitro, as well as in humans. Non-animal
methods include computer analytics, database and models based on humans –
better for science as well as humans and animals.
However, some animal researchers are stuck in the past and are resistant
about abandoning animal research for non-animal alternatives.
Researchers at London’s Institute of Neurology have been carrying out
invasive brain experiments in monkeys for four decades. An investigation
conducted by our campaign partner the National Anti-Vivisection Society in
1996 documented monkeys with electrodes inserted through their opened skull
to study the nerve connections between the brain and hand muscles. These
painful experiments continue today, while the same researchers also carry
out studies in humans, without causing such pain and suffering.
Other researchers have shown that primate research is unnecessary, and that
the same level of information can be obtained from human volunteers using
non-invasive techniques such as MEG scanning. fMRI scanning also allows the
study of neuron network in the brain, in ways previously only thought
possible using invasive methods. Neuroimaging is contributing to the
detailed mapping of the human brain, providing unprecedented understanding
of functioning and development of mental ill health and neurodegenerative
diseases.
Regulations for the safety testing of all products were originally devised
based on animal methods All over the world, the regulatory ‘tick box’
approach continues to this day. The fact that results vary between species
and are inconsistent is well known but is, effectively, set aside. Many
tests continue simply to comply with regulations, rather than for any
scientific value.
Product testing regulations require that such testing must be carried out in
at least two mammal species: a rodent species and a non-rodent “second
species”. Animals are burnt, blinded, scalded, poisoned, mutilated, starved
and products are forced down their throats through tubes, so that the
products we use every day can be called “safe”. These are things we use in
our food (additives), in our home (cleaners, laundry etc.), in our cars, our
gardens and the medicines we take; everything has been tested on animals.
Household products ingredient testing in the UK includes using animals for
“innovative benefit” or in line with European chemical testing rules.
Animals are used to test ingredients for items such as detergents, cleaning
products, air fresheners, toilet cleaners, paints, and other decorating
materials. Tests on animals for garden products such as pesticides are still
allowed.
Each year in the UK around 3,000 dogs and more than 2,000 monkeys are
subjected to painful experiments to test the safety of different chemicals
and drugs for human use. However, an analysis of animal toxicity data of
over 3,000 drugs concluded that further data from the second species does
not solve the problem of extrapolating results to humans.
ADI campaign partner, the NAVS undercover investigations in the 1980s and
90s of a number of laboratories carrying out safety testing on animals
revealed dogs being force-fed weed killer. The dose was given through a
rubber hose, pushed down each dog’s throat, directly into the stomach. Dogs
were also subjected to Maximum Tolerated Dose studies, where animals are
dosed to a level where they show signs of toxicity, such as a loss of weight
and appetite, vomiting, diarrhoea and convulsions. The drug being tested was
force-fed to restrained dogs before they were returned to their cages to
vomit.
Many years later, the NAVS again documented the same suffering in
experiments to test drugs in dogs, with side effects such as foaming at the
mouth, vomiting, bleeding from the gums and diarrhoea. Decades of suffering
despite the highly questionable validity of these tests.
Likewise in the US, animals are used to test the safety of drugs and
substances and for cosmetics testing, now banned in the UK. Although exact
figures for these experiments are unknown, latest statistics suggest over
800,000 animals, including more than 71,000 primates and nearly 61,000 dogs,
are experimented on each year. The actual figure however is likely to be
millions more as reporting omits the use of birds, rodents and farm animals,
for which authorisation is not required.
Advanced techniques which do not rely upon animals, and concentrate on
methods more relevant to humans are the way forward.
Replacing use of animals with advanced science
Animal tests can be replaced with advanced scientific methods that are
faster and more relevant to people, therefore safer, see more here.
How you can help during Lab Animal Week (April 21-28)
With your support we are making progress: bans on the use of chimpanzees and wild caught monkeys in EU labs; phasing out the capture of wild monkeys to stock the factory farms; the cosmetics testing ban; stopping the Colombian hunters trapping owl monkeys for malaria experiments; most airlines refusing to transport monkeys for research; replacement of animals in teaching and restrictions on certain painful experiments across Europe. But thousands of monkeys and dogs are still being
Toxicity testing on animals
Learn details at:
How products you buy are tested for ‘safety’
Return to: Animal Rights Activist Strategies
Read more at Alternatives to Animal Testing, Experimentation and Dissection