From HealthWatchMinute.com, August 22, 2024
The group Stop Animal Exploitation Now sent a letter to UNTHSC, calling
on the center to sever ties with the contract laboratory that carried out
the project.
FORT WORTH, Texas — A national animal rights group is alleging violations of
the Animal Welfare Act by a research organization contracted by University
of North Texas Health Science Center led to the deaths of four rabbits in a
since-suspended research project.
The group Stop Animal Exploitation Now (SAEN) sent a letter to University of
North Texas Health Science Center President Sylvia Trent-Adams that pointed
to a U.S. Department of Agriculture inspection report that found,
“significant changes were made to contracted research organization
protocol…without Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) review
and approval, resulting in the death of 4 rabbits.”
According to the inspection report and letter from SAEN, the experiment
induced diabetes in rabbits. After the administration of the drug meant to
induce diabetes, the rabbits were given “high doses of sub-cutaneous
glucose” multiple times, according to the inspection report and the group.
The protocol required that after the drug was given, the rabbits “would be
monitored twice daily with blood glucose checks for 5 days, and insulin
administered as needed based on results,” the report says. However, “no
glucose checks were performed,” according to the report.
Between April 10 and 16 this year, four rabbits involved in the experiment
were found dead, and the presumptive cause of death for all the rabbits was
found to be diabetic shock, according to the report.
The University of North Texas Health Science Center took action against the
contract laboratory that carried out the project, including suspending the
protocol, and the remaining five rabbits were stabilized with IV fluids and
insulin, according to the group and report.
The report found “several unapproved significant changes likely contributed
to the death of the 4 rabbits.”
The report alleges those changes were:
The induction medication was administered by a different route than approved
(IV instead of IP).
Twice daily monitoring of blood glucose for five days after induction was
not done as indicated in the protocol.
Glucose administration was not approved in the protocol.
Insulin was never given as indicated in the protocol.
The group called for the center to sever ties with the contract laboratory
that carried out the research project in the letter.
“The University of North Texas Health Science Center must immediately
terminate the relationship with this bungling laboratory whose employees are
clearly incapable of even following a basic project which involves
administration of drugs and monitoring of animals,” the letter from SAEN to
the center reads. “It is important to note that this project was botched,
even if the animals had not died because the approved protocol was not
followed.”