(Press-News.org) A workshop sponsored by NIH's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) has produced a set of consensus recommendations to improve the design and reporting of animal studies. By making animal studies easier to replicate and interpret, the workshop recommendations are expected to help funnel promising therapies to patients.
Biomedical research involving animals has led to life-saving drugs for heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, HIV-AIDS, and many other conditions, but positive results from animal studies are sometimes difficult to translate into successful clinical trials.
"Our goal is to ensure that preclinical animal studies are reported in sufficient detail so that funding agencies, scientific journals and the broader scientific community can adequately review the research and decide how to move forward," said NINDS Director Story C. Landis, Ph.D.
The workshop recommendations, published in the Oct. 11, 2012 issue of Nature, apply to scientific papers as well as grant applications that describe preclinical animal studies – those intended to develop and test potential therapies. About 95 percent of the animals used in research are mice and rats.
The recommendations say that all preclinical animal studies should include details about four key aspects of research methodology: randomization, blinding, sample size estimation, and data handling.
Randomization means randomly assigning animals to treatment and control groups. In a blinded study, the researchers who analyze the results are unaware of (blinded to) which animals are in the treatment and control groups until the analysis is complete.
Sample size estimation refers to calculating, before beginning the experiment, the smallest number of animals that can be used per group to detect meaningful differences between groups. Common data handling issues include how to conduct an interim data analysis without looking for a hoped-for result, and how to analyze outlier data. (For example, if 24 of 25 animals improve on an experimental drug and one gets worse, what happened? If the animal developed an illness unrelated to the drug, should it be included in an analysis of the drug's efficacy?) The recommendations say that these kinds of decisions need to be made during the design of the study rather than when it is under way.
The workshop, held June 20-21, 2012 in Washington, D.C., brought together NINDS representatives, patient advocates, and scientists from academia and industry. Editors from Cell, the Journal of the American Medical Association, Nature, Nature Neuroscience, Neurology, Neuron, and Science Translational Medicine also participated.
"The goal of the workshop recommendations is to improve the quality of scientific reporting through a shared effort," said Shai Silberberg, Ph.D., a program director at NINDS who helped organize the workshop. "Achieving a meaningful change will require the cooperation of funding agencies, journal editors and investigators, including those who volunteer their time to review scientific manuscripts and grant applications."
Dr. Silberberg emphasized that NINDS recognizes a distinction between animal studies to test hypotheses about potential treatments versus observational and exploratory studies meant to generate new hypotheses. The recommendations focus on hypothesis-testing studies rather than hypothesis-generating studies, he said.
The workshop recommendations also note that hypothesis-testing preclinical studies should be designed with the same rigor as clinical studies. In the 1990s, concerns about under-reporting and bias in clinical studies led British and Canadian researchers to develop the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement. It includes a 25-item checklist of vital information that researchers should provide and readers should look for in write-ups of clinical studies. The CONSORT statement has been adopted by more than half of the core biomedical journals searchable through NIH's index of scientific publications, PubMed.
NINDS has already taken steps to implement the recommendations. In August 2011, the Institute published a notice in the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts emphasizing the importance of good study design in grant applications. Consistent with the recommendations, NINDS has posted a list of points for grant applicants to consider when designing and reporting experiments, and for reviewers to consider when reading grant applications. NINDS is evaluating ways to encourage broad adoption of the recommendations. Possibilities include providing additional training to investigators, and creating a checklist similar to the CONSORT list.
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Reference: Landis, SC et al. "A call for transparent reporting to optimize the predictive value of preclinical research." Nature, published online October 10, 2012.
NINDS is the nation's leading funder of research on the brain and nervous system. The NINDS mission is to reduce the burden of neurological disease – a burden borne by every age group, by every segment of society, by people all over the world.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.
NIH–sponsored workshop calls for more detailed reporting in animal studies
Improved study design and data sharing are expected to speed therapy development
2012-10-11
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[Press-News.org] NIH–sponsored workshop calls for more detailed reporting in animal studiesImproved study design and data sharing are expected to speed therapy development