Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9033848 | Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
A working party, comprising two animal welfare organisations and some 12 pharmaceutical companies in Europe, was established to minimise the use of the dog in safety testing. As first step, the participants defined the major objectives of preliminary dose-range finding/MTD toxicity studies in non-rodents, defined the principles and requirements for this study type and agreed on a proposal for an optimised study design, based on collective experience of conducting such studies in industry, involving an evaluation of 100 individual study data sets. The suggested study design is explained and described, and reflects current best practice in the pharmaceutical industry in Europe. The implementation of such an optimised design is believed to result in a reduction in the overall numbers of animals used for this purpose, without jeopardising the scientific rationale and usefulness of the studies for informing the conduct of later regulatory studies.
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Authors
David Smith, Robert Combes, Olympe Depelchin, Soren Dyring Jacobsen, Ruediger Hack, Joerg Luft, Lieve Lammens, Friedrich von Landenberg, Barry Phillips, Rudolf Pfister, Yvon Rabemampianina, Susan Sparrow, Claudia Stark, Markus Stephan-Gueldner,