FDA To Phase Out Animal Testing In The Development Of Monoclonal Antibodies, Other Drugs

RTTNews | Pred 3 dňami
FDA To Phase Out Animal Testing In The Development Of Monoclonal Antibodies, Other Drugs

(RTTNews) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has announced a plan to replace animal testing in the development of monoclonal antibody therapies and other drugs with more effective, human-relevant methods.

The plan is in line with the agency's efforts to modernize regulatory science as technology advances, and follows the demand by Congress and the scientific community over the years for more human-relevant testing methods.

The health regulator noted that the proposed elimination of animal testing is designed to improve drug safety and accelerate the evaluation process, while reducing animal experimentation, lowering research and development or R&D costs, and eventually drug prices.

According to the FDA Commissioner Martin Makary, the proposal means a more efficient pipeline for novel treatments for patients, and its an added margin of safety, since human-based test systems may better predict real-world outcomes. In addition, for animal welfare, it represents a major step towards ending the use of laboratory animals in drug testing with thousands of animals, including dogs and primates, eventually be spared each year.

Implementation of the regimen will begin immediately for investigational new drug or IND applications, where inclusion of New Approach Methodologies or NAMs data is encouraged.

Over the coming year, the FDA aims to launch a pilot program allowing select monoclonal antibody developers to use a primarily non-animal-based testing strategy, which will be under close FDA consultation.

To make determinations of efficacy, the FDA will also begin using pre-existing, real-world safety data from other countries, with comparable regulatory standards, where the drug has already been studied in humans.

The agency is also releasing a roadmap, which will be discussed by the FDA and its federal partners through a public workshop to be hosted later this year.

The FDA expects that animal testing requirement will be reduced, refined, or potentially replaced using a range of approaches. These would include AI-based computational models of toxicity and cell lines and organoid toxicity testing in a laboratory setting.

Replacing animal testing in monoclonal antibody safety evaluation encourages developers to leverage computer modeling and artificial intelligence to predict a drug's behavior, which will drastically reduce the need for animal trials.

Further, the agency will promote the use of lab-grown human "organoids" and organ-on-a-chip systems that mimic human organs, such as liver, heart, and immune organs, to test drug safety. These experiments can reveal toxic effects and provide a more direct window into human responses. Such toxic effects, if any, could easily go undetected in animals.

The guidelines of the agency will be updated to allow consideration of data from these new methods. With that, companies that submit strong safety data from non-animal tests may receive streamlined review, as the need for certain animal studies is eliminated.

In addition, the FDA expects that the use of these modern techniques would help speed up the drug development process, enabling monoclonal antibody therapies to reach patients more quickly without compromising safety.

For More Such Health News, visit rttnews.com

read more
European Economic News Preview: UK Labor Market Data Due

European Economic News Preview: UK Labor Market Data Due

Labor market statistics from the UK and economic confidence survey from Germany are the top economic news due on Tuesday. At 2.00 am ET, the Office for National Statistics releases UK unemployment data for February. The jobless rate is seen unchanged at 4.4 percent in the three months to February period.
RTTNews | Pred 1 h 27 min
European Shares Seen Flat To Higher At Open

European Shares Seen Flat To Higher At Open

European stocks may open flat to slightly higher on Tuesday as investors evaluate mixed messages from the Trump administration on the tariffs front.
RTTNews | Pred 1 h 45 min
RBA Minutes Say May Meeting Is

RBA Minutes Say May Meeting Is "Opportune" Time To Revisit Policy Setting

Policymakers of the Reserve Bank of Australia said it is important to remain alert to the evolving balance of risks and concluded that the May meeting would be an opportune time to revisit the monetary policy setting, the minutes of the April meeting showed on Tuesday. Members judged that it was not appropriate at this stage for monetary policy to react to the potential risks that could move out
RTTNews | Pred 2 h 36 min
Sensex, Nifty Surge On US Tariff Reprieve

Sensex, Nifty Surge On US Tariff Reprieve

Indian shares opened on a buoyant note Tuesday following a surprise U.S. tariff exemption of smartphones and computers, as well as other devices and components.
RTTNews | Pred 3 h 4 min
Australian Market Maintains Early Gains In Mid-market

Australian Market Maintains Early Gains In Mid-market

The Australian stock market is maintaining its early modest gains in mid-market trading on Tuesday, extending the gains in the previous session, following the broadly positive cues from Wall Street overnight. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 is staying below the 7,800 level, with small gains across most sectors led by financial and mining stocks.
RTTNews | Pred 3 h 31 min
Asian Markets Track Wall Street Higher

Asian Markets Track Wall Street Higher

Asian stock markets are trading mostly higher on Tuesday, following the broadly positive cues from Wall Street overnight, after reports the U.S. is considering pausing the 25 percent tariffs on auto imports and decided to exempt certain consumer electronics from its so-called reciprocal tariffs. Asian markets closed mostly higher on Monday.
RTTNews | Pred 3 h 59 min