Identification of Rodent Husbandry Refinement Opportunities through Benchmarking and Collaboration

Author:

Bratcher Natalie A1,Allen Carolyn M2,McLahan Craig L3,O'Connell Denice M2,Burr Holly N3,Keen Jessica N4,Stanislawczyk Lisa M5,Burns Monika A6

Affiliation:

1. AbbVie, North Chicago, Ilinois;, Email: Natalie.Bratcher@abbvie.com

2. AbbVie, North Chicago, Ilinois

3. Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, New Jersey

4. Charles River Laboratories, Ashland, Ohio

5. Bristol Myers Squibb, Princeton, New Jersey

6. Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR), Cambridge, Massachusetts

Abstract

Expanding the use of methods that refine, reduce, and replace (3Rs) the use of animals in research is fundamental for both ethical and scientific reasons. The mission of the 3Rs Translational and Predictive Sciences Leadership Group (3Rs TPS LG) of the International Consortium for Innovation and Quality in Pharmaceutical Development (IQ Consortium) is to promote sharing and integration of science and technology to advance the 3Rs in the discovery and development of new medicines, vaccines, medical devices, and health care products for humans and animals. The 3Rs TPS LG is dedicated to identifying opportunities for member companies to share practices, enhance learning, promote discussions, and advance the 3Rs across the industry. One such opportunity was a benchmarking survey, conducted by the Contract Research Organization (CRO) Outreach Working Group, designed to share practices in rodent husbandry for drug safety research and to identify potential opportunities for refinement. IQ member companies and CROs in Asia, North America, and Europe were surveyed. Areas identified for potential alignment included provision of corncob bedding and wire-grid flooring, management of the nest at cage change, approaches to social housing for male mice, evidence-based enrichment strategies, and evaluating the effects of the timing of studies in relation to the animals' circadian rhythm and light-cycle, with consideration for how such extrinsic factors influence animal welfare and scientific outcomes. This manuscript presents the results of the benchmarking survey, including general trends in mouse and rat husbandry practices in toxicology studies, considerations for social housing, enrichment selection, and potential effects of bedding substrate, emphasizing opportunities for collaboration that can help to identify refinements to rodent husbandry practices.

Publisher

American Association for Laboratory Animal Science

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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