From Ian Munro, TheVirginian-Pilot, March 17, 2023
Animal testing done at Eastern Virginia Medical School was found to have
made two critical-level violations of the Animal Welfare Act in a January
federal inspection.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Inspection Service
found that animal research at the Norfolk institution was not humanely
caring for the animals through the testing process and that process had
deviated from the testing proposals that had been previously approved,
according to the report publicly available on the USDA website. Research on
animals is overseen and approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee of the National Institutes of Health.
Four female chinchillas, a type of South American rodent, lost between 25%
to 30% of their weight and were kept in the tests, though were supposed to
be removed if they lost over 20% of their body weight. Three chinchillas
were noted to arrive at EVMS on Feb. 19, 2020, and two euthanized and one
died months later by Sept. 7 while the fourth was euthanized on Oct. 18,
2021, according to the report.
In a more recent anesthesia study, testing on monkeys deviated from approved
plans as two were above the maximum age of testing of 23 years, five females
were underweight, two monkeys received sweetened drinks for 7.5 months when
they were supposed to only receive them for three to six months. Six monkeys
also received extra insulin and sugar injected and had blood drawn more
often than approved, according to the report.
“The facility failed to utilize appropriate methods to prevent, control, and
diagnose medical issues that arose from the administration of IV insulin,
ultimately leading to the death of an animal and hours of unresolved, low
blood glucose levels in others,” according to part of the report.
The inspection was performed Jan. 12, according to the report.
The violations in the report are some of the worst cases that Michael
Budkie, of anti-animal testing group Stop Animal Exploitation Now, said he’s
seen in over three decades.
Budkie said penalties are still relatively low for such institutions meaning
they do not end up having a “meaningful impact.” APHIS moves to enforcement
if they discover that researchers have not made the appropriate fixes
required after an inspection, according to the USDA.
“That’s why alerting the general public and exposing what happens in these
facilities is equally important as any legal action that the USDA would
take,” he said. “Because research facilities we have found value their
public reputation.
The January federal report required the medical school to amend the issues
by Feb. 16, according to the report. Both studies were completed by that
date, according to a statement from EVMS.
EVMS was contracted to provide the facility for the chinchilla research, the
statement said. EVMS did not provide the name of the Richmond company
Wednesday or Thursday.
“COVID restrictions limited access to the facilities where the animals were
housed and hampered the ability to conduct research as dictated by the
research protocol,” the response said. “The company was not responsive to
repeated inquiries; however, in the interim, the EVMS veterinary care staff
continued to monitor the animals to assess their overall well-being. Once
COVID restrictions were lifted, the company completed the study and the
research project has been closed by EVMS.
In the monkey testing, the researcher was unable to get monkeys in the age
and size range that he had previously submitted for approval, according to
EVMS. Monkeys outside the age range protocols but otherwise met the
experimental parameters were found and the researcher did not inform the
oversight committee.
“Two staff veterinarians monitored and cared for the animals during the
research period, although all medical interventions were not fully
documented. Although some animals took longer than anticipated to recover
from anesthesia and blood sugar levels were not recorded, the veterinarians
consulted with the investigator on a regular basis as to the medical status
of the animals and they treated the animals as they deemed appropriate
within the confines of what was medically allowable without negatively
exacerbating their clinical status,” the statement said. “Unfortunately, not
all of the animals responded to treatment.”
Budkie and other anti-animal testing groups have said that animal testing is
ineffective compared to other modern drug testing techniques.
“When you layer on top of that the fact that facilities like [EVMS] do not
even follow their own approved protocols, that makes this experimentation
into scientific nonsense,” he said. “And the scientific world and the
general public would be much better served if facilities like EVMS used much
more cutting edge technology such as organ on a chip technology, which is
based on human tissue as opposed to something happening on a guinea pig or a
chinchilla or even a nonhuman primate.”
EVMS said the IACUC that approve animal research protocols are now
counseling EVMS researchers.
Animal testing is done by researchers to establish safety of a new product
and is sometimes decided upon after other avenues of figuring out a
product’s safety have been ruled out, according to the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. The federal administration also believes companies should
consider every other avenue before deciding on animal testing.
“Moreover, in all cases where animal testing is used, FDA advocates that
research and testing derive the maximum amount of useful scientific
information from the minimum number of animals and employ the most humane
methods available within the limits of scientific capability,” the FDA
website said.