August 31, 2023

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We won't always have to use animals for medical research: Here's what we can do instead

Credit: AI-generated image (disclaimer)
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Credit: AI-generated image (disclaimer)

Animals have been used for medical research for thousands of years, dating back to ancient Greece where the first dissections were performed.

These days, one of the main uses of is to ensure the safety of before they're trialed in humans.

But in addition to the important ethical reasons for minimizing animal use, the reality is sometimes animals just aren't that good at predicting human responses. No animal model, for example, has captured all the human characteristics of complex illnesses like Alzheimer's disease or chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (a neuromuscular disease). This makes is hard to develop effective treatments and cures.

Thankfully, researchers are making progress in developing a collection of alternative approaches, called "non-animal models." A new report from our team at CSIRO Futures examines the potential of non-animal models and the actions Australia will need to take to pursue their use.

What are non-animal models?

Non-animal models are an alternative set of models that use human cells, tissues and data.

These have the potential to better mimic human responses. In doing so, this can more accurately predict if a medical product is likely to fail, allowing reinvestment in products that are more likely to succeed.

Computer simulations or "in silico models" are one example. These can be used across the medical product development process to complement—and in time potentially replace—other model types. They can be used in drug studies to model a drug's behavior within the body, from cellular interactions to processes that involve multiple organs.

Complex three-dimensional biological models are also maturing quickly. Examples include:

What can we use non-animal models for?

In theory, we can use non-animal models for everything we use animal models for—and more.

Simple non-animal models ( cultured over a flat surface) are already used to help identify drug targets due to their ability to test a large number of compounds and experimental conditions.

In the future, non-animal models will reduce—and eventually replace—animal use across a range of applications:

Outside of medical products designed for humans, non-animal models can also support innovation in veterinary and agricultural medicines, cosmetic testing and eco-toxicology.

An export opportunity for Australia

Non-animal models present an economic opportunity for Australia, where the models, their components, and surrounding services could be exported to the world.

Our novel economic analysis sized the potential Australian market for two non-animal models: organoids and organs-on-chips. Other models were unable to be sized due to a lack of global market data.

We estimate the Australian organoid market could be worth A$1.3 billion annually by 2040 and create 4,200 new jobs.

The organs-on-chips market could be worth A$300 million annually by 2040 and create 1,000 new jobs. This estimate is lower as this technology is currently less advanced but holds the potential to grow significantly beyond 2040.

Several Australian entities are already contributing to these opportunities. The Murdoch Children's Research Institute, for example, provides stem cell and modeling expertise as part of reNEW, a €300 million .

Another example is from Schott Minifab, an international biotech and medical device company with Australian roots, which has successfully established scaled production of non-animal model components in Australia for domestic and export markets.

Making it a reality

Non-animal models have already begun to complement and replace animal use in some areas, such as identifying drug targets.

However, accelerating their development and adoption across a wider range of applications will require further technical advances to lower cost and validate their performance as superior models.

Australia has several research strengths in this field but we need a concentrated effort to help our research make it through to real world impact.

Our report makes ten recommendations for supporting Australia's pursuit of these opportunities. Critical activities over the next five years include:

Governments, industry and research must collaborate to deliver against these actions. Success will only come from collective efforts.

Provided by The Conversation

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