Guest guest Posted March 30, 2007 Report Share Posted March 30, 2007 BlankRecent Cases Point To the Limitations Of Animal Drug Tests By ANNA WILDE MATHEWS March 30, 2007; Page B1 The promising diabetes drug Galvus recently got turned back by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. About 5,500 patients had taken the medicine in clinical trials at that point, but the problem apparently wasn't with them. The agency was worried because some monkeys who were given high doses of Galvus developed skin lesions. Humans who took normal amounts of the drug for as long as two years didn't get the sores, but the FDA refused to approve the drug until it saw more testing in people who might be at higher risk. The decision spotlighted an important unresolved scientific question: What do the results of animal studies really tell us about humans? That question still puzzles researchers even though guinea pigs, lab rats and their brethren have long been part of experiments. -------------- skip ---------------- Currently, the FDA is looking at results showing some anesthetic drugs led to neurological damage in young primates. Before regulators approve a drug, it typically has been tested on hundreds of animals. The FDA requires initial testing in at least two species: one rodent, one nonrodent. By the end of the process, mice, pigs, rabbits, dogs, monkeys and other animals may have been used. Many times, however, subtle results in animals are unclear and scientists just don't know what to make of them. In the case of the new Novartis drug Galvus, , the company's global head of pharmaceutical development, told investors that Novartis researchers " do not understand -- do not know -- the mechanism of the skin findings " in monkeys. They do know that " humans appear to react to Galvus in a very different way. " Another example of the confusing disparities that can arise in testing is the case of the popular sleep drug Lunesta. It won FDA approval despite the fact that tumors appeared when rats and mice took huge doses of a closely related chemical cousin of the medication. Some FDA reviewers were concerned enough initially to recommend rejection of Lunesta. After further analyses, however, agency officials concluded the data from human testing didn't suggest a signal for cancer in people. But you won't see the issue highlighted in the company's ubiquitous green-moth commercials for the drug. It can happen that a product doesn't hurt animals, but turns out to be poisonous to patients. That occurred with the catastrophic British trial of an experimental biotech drug called TGN1412, meant to treat leukemia and other diseases. It didn't cause problems when given to monkeys and other species. Then six people took it in a small initial study and had life-threatening convulsions and organ failure. British regulators blamed an " unpredicted biological action of the drug in humans " that wasn't foretold by the " apparently adequate " preclinical studies. -------------- skip ---------------- Scientists agree, there's no way to precisely and consistently translate from animal to human results. After the withdrawals of the painkiller Vioxx and other medicines with side effects that didn't fully reveal themselves during years of testing, the need for such a translation looms particularly large. Full story http://online.wsj.com/article/SB117519602221153510.html?mod=health_home_inside_t\ oday_left_column Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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