top
International
International
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

"you don't have to be an anti-vivisectionist to doubt animal testing"

by karen dawn
DawnWatch: Terrific UK article "Of mice, men and medical concern" 3/4/05
There is a wonderful article in the Friday, March 4, Financial Times (London) headed "Of mice, men and medical concern: Recent health alerts suggest you don't have to be an anti-vivisectionist to doubt the validity of animal testing." (Pg 11)

The article discusses drugs and products that made it onto the market only because animal tests failed to predict their danger to humans. Conversely, it tells us, "the evidence suggests animal tests may be unduly sensitive, wrongly predicting toxicity in compounds that are in fact harmless to humans. If so, it would be an ironic twist to the widely held belief that tests of animal are crucial to the advancement of medicine, as they may in fact be blocking the development of many safe and effective new treatments."

It ends with: "What is clear is that, given the paucity of systematic evidence, it is not necessary to be a placard-waving protestor to harbour doubts about the validity of animal testing."

You'll find a link to the article at http://news.ft.com/cms/s/9d740c90-8c53-11d9-a895-00000e2511c8.html, but the full article is only available to Financial Times subscribers. I will paste it below for non-profit educational purposes.

Since our human animal nature seems to encourage the greatest interest in the welfare of our own kind, it is great to see this issue tackled from the standpoint of efficacy. However, the article opens the door to letters that point to the immense animal suffering endured in the questionable testing. The Financial Times takes letters at: letters.editor [at] ft.com

Always include your full name, address, and daytime phone number when sending a letter to the editor. Shorter letters are more likely to be published.

Here's the article:
------
Financial Times (London, England)
March 4, 2005 Friday

BUSINESS LIFE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY; Pg. 11

Of mice, men and medical concern: Recent health alerts suggest you don't have to be an anti-vivisectionist to doubt the validity of animal testing, writes Robert Matthews

By ROBERT MATTHEWS

Two huge industries affecting the lives of millions of people are currently subject to big health alerts. Concern over serious side-effects has cast a long shadow over promising new painkillers, known as cox-2 inhibitors, developed by the pharmaceutical industry. Evidence linking the drugs to an increased risk of heart attacks led the US giant Merck to withdraw its version, known as Vioxx, from the market last September, and an investigation by the -US Food and Drug Administration is currently under way.

More recently, it was the turn of the UK food industry, with the discovery of traces of a banned dye known as Sudan I in a sauce made by Premier Foods, a leading UK supplier. In the ensuing health scare, the UK Food Standards Agency found that hundreds of products had been inadvertently contaminated by the dye, which has been linked to cancer.

As the initial furore starts to fade, both these health alerts are being seen primarily as wake-up calls to business and regulators alike about the monitoring of product safety.

In the case of cox-2 inhibitors, the FDA looks set to allow their continued use - albeit with much sterner safety warnings to protect those most at risk from side-effects. Meanwhile, as shops and supermarkets in the UK hunt down produce contaminated with Sudan I, the FSA has continued to stress that the risks involved are "very small".

As well it might, for it is now clear that the scientific case against Sudan I is far from compelling. Laboratory safety tests involved feeding rodents with levels of Sudan I equivalent to human consumption of the sauce that triggered the scare at a rate of three tonnes a day for two years.

Even after such gargantuan exposure, the animals failed to produce consistent evidence of a cancer risk. Other tests hinted at links with bladder and liver tumours - but only after the dye was injected directly into the organs of laboratory animals.

While the scientific basis for both the Sudan I and cox-2 inhibitor health scares may be contentious, they have highlighted the need for close surveillance and prompt action if problems emerge. At the same time, however, an even more fundamental question has gone begging: just how reliable are animal tests of product safety?

In the case of food safety, the relevance to humans of animal tests involving colossal intakes or direct injection into organs is clearly questionable. The use of animals in drug safety testing raises altogether more complex issues, however - as the cox-2 painkillers controversy shows.

In line with standard practice, Vioxx and the other drugs were tested in at least two different types of animal before entering clinical trials with humans. One of the main aims of such "pre-clinical" testing is to detect signs of serious side-effects. In the case of the cox-2 drugs, the animal testing failed to warn of the cardiovascular effects that have prompted the current furore. Indeed, several animal studies suggested the drugs would actually reduce the risk of such side-effects.

So what went wrong? Anti-vivisectionists have been quick to voice their standard objection: animals are not humans.

For all its familiarity, it is an argument that does have relevance to the cox-2 inhibitors. In 2000, barely a year after the launch of Vioxx, a study of more than 8,000 patients suggested that those taking the drug faced a significantly increased risk of heart attack. Yet subsequent animal-based research continued to suggest such drugs could reduce the risk - prompting even Merck's experts to concede in The American Heart Journal that: "The relevance of these animal models in predicting effects in humans is uncertain."

It is becoming clear that such uncertainty extends far beyond one class of blockbuster drug.

Leading journal Nature Reviews Drug Discovery last year published a review of the evidence that animals are reliable predictors of toxic effects in humans. The authors found that the evidence was "fragmentary", with the few published studies pointing to "significant over- and under-prediction of adverse effects from animal studies that varies with the particular organ or system".

The review also highlighted the lack of basic data needed for a scientific assessment of animal testing, such as measures of predictive power and their statistical significance.

As it stands, the evidence suggests animal tests may be unduly sensitive, wrongly predicting toxicity in compounds that are in fact harmless to humans. If so, it would be an ironic twist to the widely held belief that tests of animal are crucial to the advancement of medicine, as they may in fact be blocking the development of many safe and effective new treatments.

Yet in the absence of large-scale studies comparing drug responses in animals and humans, it is impossible to know. Supporters and critics of animal testing continue to trade anecdotes of individual successes and failures, most published studies being so small they lack statistical credibility.

In another irony, the drive to minimise the use of animals has compelled researchers to draw conclusions from meagre evidence. For example, the studies designed to investigate the effect of cox-2 inhibitors on cardiovascular risk typically involved fewer than 20 mice.

The authors of last year's review called on regulatory bodies and drugs companies to publish data currently languishing in their files. Whether the outcome will confirm or confound the view that animals usefully predict human reactions remains to be seen.

What is clear is that, given the paucity of systematic evidence, it is not necessary to be a placard-waving protestor to harbour doubts about the validity of animal testing.

The writer is visiting reader in science at Aston University, Birmingham
---------------
(DawnWatch is an animal advocacy media watch that looks at animal issues in the media and facilitates one-click responses to the relevant media outlets. You can learn more about it, and sign up for alerts at http://www.DawnWatch.com. If you forward or reprint DawnWatch alerts, please do so unedited -- leave DawnWatch in the title and include this tag line.)

by Mike (stepbystepfarm <a> mtdata.com)
And it doesn't matter that the original author is a lecturer in Science.

Scientific statements (conclusions based upon observation and experiment) are never more than conditional statements with some given probability of being true. When the results are stated, there is always a stated probablity (aka "level of confidence") that random chance alone produced the results. People often fail to understand what that means.

When results are published, say at the 95% confidence level, that means that about one in twenty such experiments gave false results and the conclusion is wrong.

That means it will ALWAYS be possible to list cases where the experiment (in this case using animals) failed to give useful results. All you need to do is consider enough such exeperiments so that the 5% (or 1% if the experiments are done at the 99% confidence level) will result in some cases. The demand that such experiments not be done unless there is CERTAINTY that the results are valid is actually a demand for some mystical method unrelated to science. Science never produces certainty -- that concept belongs to "religion".

Speaking of which, Karen, I am an animal. Not a plant, not a bacterium, not a fungus or virus. I do not aspire to some supposed higher state of existence. You of course are free to do so if you wish. Just recognize that the "realm of discourse" in which we disagree is that of "religion". Which means that there is now a big difference between you yourself choosing to practice "ahimsa" (I'm borrowing a useful religious term) and attempting to impose thsoe practices upon others. Please --- I am NOT saying that you can't do this << people have often tried to ram their "religions" down other peoples' throats >> but so that you understand the nature of the resistance.
by heard it before
That is no reason to abandon flight. Statistically speaking, flight is the safest form of mechanized travel. Likewise, in the vast, overwhelming majority of cases, animal testing does immensely more good than harm. If, for whatever reason, you don’t want to participate in the proven benefits, you are free to boycott. You are *not* free to prevent others from participating. In particular, you are not free to engage in acts of terrorism to prevent others from participating. Stop now.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$230.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network