Bara Meredith, Joffe Ari R
Crit Care. 2014 Jan 14;18(1):R15. doi: 10.1186/cc13694.
The ethical quality of animal research is important for many reasons, including for maintaining public support. We aimed to determine the reported attention to the ethical dimensions of the 3Rs (Refinement, Reduction, and Replacement) in critical care animal research published in 2012.
A data-collection form and instruction manual were created based on published recommendations, and completed for all consecutive critical care animal research (using mammals) publications from January to June 2012 in three critical care journals. Predefined subgroups were by journal, sepsis model, and animal age, compared by using the χ2 statistic, with statistical significance accepted at P < 0.05.
In total, 77 consecutive animal research publications were reviewed. Most studies did not report monitoring the level of anesthesia during invasive procedures, even when muscle paralytics were used, nor monitoring or treatment of expected pain. When euthanasia was used, the method was often not stated, and when stated, most methods were not appropriate for the species. A sample-size calculation was rarely used, and animal numbers were often poorly described. No studies performed a systematic review to ensure that the animal research would be useful and not simple repetition. Seventeen (22%) publications met the composite outcome of, if indicated, using anesthesia and pain control, and stating the method of euthanasia. Most studies were funded with public funds (foundation or government funding). Sepsis models less often met the composite outcome of, if indicated, using anesthesia and pain control, and stating the method of euthanasia (2 (7%) of 27 versus 15 (30%) of 50; P = 0.023). No other statistically significant differences were found in reporting of any criterion by animal age, sepsis model, or journal.
Reported (although not necessarily actual) ethical quality of animal research in three high-impact critical care journals during 6 months of 2012 was poor. This has important implications for the practice of critical care animal research.
动物研究的伦理质量至关重要,原因诸多,包括维持公众支持。我们旨在确定2012年发表的重症监护动物研究中报告的对3R原则(优化、减少和替代)伦理维度的关注情况。
根据已发表的建议创建了数据收集表和指导手册,并填写了2012年1月至6月在三种重症监护期刊上发表的所有连续的重症监护动物研究(使用哺乳动物)出版物。通过使用χ2统计量对预定义的亚组按期刊、脓毒症模型和动物年龄进行比较,P < 0.05时接受统计学显著性。
总共审查了77篇连续的动物研究出版物。大多数研究未报告在侵入性操作期间监测麻醉水平,即使使用了肌肉松弛剂,也未报告对预期疼痛的监测或治疗。当使用安乐死时,方法通常未说明,即使说明,大多数方法也不适用于该物种。很少使用样本量计算,动物数量的描述往往很差。没有研究进行系统评价以确保动物研究有用且不是简单重复。17篇(22%)出版物符合综合结果,即如有说明,使用麻醉和疼痛控制,并说明安乐死方法。大多数研究由公共资金(基金会或政府资助)资助。脓毒症模型较少符合综合结果,即如有说明,使用麻醉和疼痛控制,并说明安乐死方法(27篇中的2篇(7%)对50篇中的15篇(30%);P = 0.023)。在按动物年龄、脓毒症模型或期刊报告的任何标准方面未发现其他统计学显著差异。
2012年6个月期间,三种高影响力重症监护期刊上报告的(尽管不一定是实际的)动物研究伦理质量较差。这对重症监护动物研究的实践具有重要意义。