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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Evolving value and validity of animal models in veterinary therapeutic research: Impact of scientific progress.

Journal:
European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
Year:
2025
Authors:
Martinez, Marilyn N et al.
Affiliation:
Center for Veterinary Medicine · United States

Plain-English summary

In veterinary medicine, researchers often use live animals to study diseases and test new treatments. However, there is a growing need to rethink how we use these animal models, considering new scientific findings, better animal welfare standards, and other research methods that don't involve live animals. This is important to ensure that our research practices are ethical and relevant, especially as we learn more about how animals experience pain and emotions. The commentary discusses the challenges of applying findings from one species to another, particularly when the animal being studied is also the one receiving treatment. It suggests that using alternative research methods early on could help improve veterinary research while still focusing on the well-being of the animals involved.

Abstract

In veterinary medicine, experimental in vivo animal models have long been integral to advancing our understanding of disease mechanisms and assessing the safety and efficacy of potential therapies. However, the value and validity of these models warrants reassessment in light of emerging scientific evidence, evolving standards in animal welfare, and the development of alternative methodologies. Such a reassessment is essential for maintaining ethical scientific practices and ensuring that research approaches remain both relevant and justifiable, especially as our awareness of animal pain, sentience, and consciousness deepens. While interspecies extrapolation of findings from these models poses challenges when applied to human medicine, what about cases where an animal species serves as both the experimental subject and the intended veterinary patient? Additionally, what alternative tools are potentially available to replace in vivo studies in these contexts? This commentary explores how veterinary research may improve efforts to meet the principles of the 3R's by integrating alternative in vitro and in silico models early in the investigative process and utilizing specialized tools within the target veterinary population during clinical trials.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40286991/