Citizens for
Alternatives to Animal Research and Experimentation(CAARE)
November 2015
A new breakthrough in toxicity detection has led to the first animal-free screening platform that accurately predicts the danger of drugs and other compounds on the human kidney....Animal models of renal toxicity have not accurately predicted drug response in humans. One in four cases of acute renal failure in human patients is due to adverse drug reactions.
A new breakthrough in toxicity detection has led to the first animal-free
screening platform that accurately predicts the danger of drugs and other
compounds on the human kidney.
Scientists at the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (IBN) in
Singapore have developed a platform that uses human cells and sophisticated
computer modeling to create a highly efficient and automated method for
predicting the chance of kidney (renal) damage, a process known as
nephrotoxicity.
Kidney cells generated from stem cells untreated (top)
or treated with a toxic compound (bottom)
Image credit: IBN Singapore
Kidneys, which are responsible for filtering and eliminating waste
products in the body, are especially prone to drug-induced toxicity. The IBN
platform uses automated cellular imaging to discern precise mechanisms of
cell injury, allowing for an increased understanding of how drugs act at the
microscopic level.
Dogs and rats, and to a lesser extent monkeys, are most typically used for
painful and often deadly renal toxicity tests that are expensive, lengthy
and unreliable due to inter-species difference.
A single toxicity trial can use 160 rats and 32 dogs, spanning weeks to
months. Animals who survive one trial may be used in subsequent trials,
depending on the outcomes. Almost all die, either as a result of the toxic
exposure, or are killed to study their tissues.
Animal models of renal toxicity have not accurately predicted drug
response in humans. One in four cases of acute renal failure in human
patients is due to adverse drug reactions.
The pharmaceutical industry reports that 30% of drugs that show potential in
the early stages of development fail due to evidence of nephrotoxicity.
These failures weigh heavily on the overall cost of drug development which
ranges from $1 – 2 billion per drug.
The innovative screening platform developed by the IBN team utilizes human
induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which are stem cells derived from
readily obtainable surface cells, like skin. These are then bio-engineered
into renal cells. Once a very scientifically esoteric process, increasing
advancements in stem cell technology are enabling scientists to use this
very powerful process to develop highly effective and versatile stem cells.
The IBN researchers incorporated the use of a process known as “machine
learning” to boost the platform’s efficiency. Machine learning is an
outgrowth of computer science that uses data mining and pattern recognition
to interpret large quantities of data.
According to IBN lead researcher Dr. Daniele Zink, "We have developed the
fastest and most efficient protocol for generating kidney cells from induced
pluripotent stem cells. Within eight days, it yielded highly pure kidney
cells that were suitable for compound screening. … [and] allow us to predict
drug-induced nephrotoxicity with great accuracy.”
The new renal screening platform demonstrates how cutting-edge human-cell based technology can dramatically surpass the inhumane use of animals for toxicity testing.
Citizens for Alternatives to Animal Research (CAARE), is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, established to highlight and promote research without animals.
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