From Samuel Lisec, News-Gazette.com, May 14, 2024
An animal-advocacy group has issued a complaint against the University of
Illinois that argues one of its investigators should no longer be allowed to
work with animals after a federally funded experiment involved the death of
four mice without prior approval.
Michael Budkie, executive director of Stop Animal Exploitation Now, a
nonprofit that aims to eliminate the use of animal subjects in science
experiments, lodged the complaint late last month, citing a January 2023
internal letter to the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Ryan Dilger, chair of the UI's Department of Animal Sciences, stated in
the letter that UI’s Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee became
aware in October 2022 of an “adverse event” report from animal-care staff
expressing welfare concerns about four lab mice found dead or needing to be
euthanized.
The mice had been fed the hormone Tamoxifen in order to study gene silencing
within cardiac tissues, and the lead investigator later confirmed that they
were “allowing mice to die intentionally for purposes of generating survival
curves.”
However, the protocol the UI's animal-care committee approved for the
experiment had not included death of the mice subjects as a potential
outcome. As a result, Dilger requested that all experimental procedures stop
immediately “so corrective action could be taken.”
UI spokeswoman Robin Kaler, confirmed that Dilger wrote the letter and that
the animal-care committee became aware of the four dead mice.
“Subsequent review revealed that the specific outcome leading to the death
of these mice was not described or approved,” Kaler said. “A plan to prevent
recurrence of the outcome was developed by the investigator, approved by the
IACUC and shared with federal regulators.”
Budkie has been involved with the animal-rights group for nearly 40 years
and encountered the letter to the federal institute’s Office of Laboratory
Animal Welfare amid the nonprofit’s routine Freedom of Information Act
requests to labs across the country.
He emphasized that the protocol deviation is important because experiments
that include the death of animal subjects require a higher degree of
monitoring so researchers can adequately euthanize their subjects once
they’ve collected all their relevant data.
Budkie also highlighted that if experiments are being performed apart from
how their protocols are approved, that means the data those experiments
generate cannot be reproduced, as peer reviewers won’t know exactly what was
done in the lab.
“If the data is not reproducible, then it’s worthless, and that means that
things like the deaths of these animals are taking place for nothing,”
Budkie said.
Dilger’s letter concluded that the UI animal-care committee requested that
the lab’s lead investigator amend their experiment protocol to clarify
clinical outcomes and justify death as an endpoint for the mice.
The committee considered the amendments appropriate — mice were to be
observed three times a day and their cardiac health monitored — but conveyed
that any research data resulting from the protocols used when the mice died
could be included in any publications.
Budkie argued that the fact that the committee temporarily halted the
experiment and that no data generated from its unapproved protocols can be
used in publications is further evidence the lead investigator committed a
serious violation.
But he faulted the UI for one decision: allowing that investigator to resume
the lab and continue working with animals.
Ultimately, he characterized the investigator as “nothing more than an
animal abuser masquerading as a scientist” and indicated that his group is
waiting to hear from UI President Timothy Killeen before taking further
steps.
“This is not an issue we intend to drop,” Budkie said.