In response to the public health crisis involving e-cigarette or vaping associated lung injury, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) has made the dire decision to use animals to study the role of vitamin E acetate and other potentially toxic compounds in e-cigarettes.
USE THIS FORM TO SEND AN EMAIL: Tell the CDC: Don't torture animals to study vaping!
This decision is totally out of step with the current trend to reduce and eventually eliminate animal testing in regulatory toxicology studies.
Decades of studies have shown that significant differences in the anatomy
and physiology of the respiratory tract of humans and other animals make
them unfit for studying human pathologies.
Animal testing is so unreliable that in 2018 the U.S. National Toxicology
Program released a “Strategic Roadmap” advising regulatory agencies to
“provide more human relevant toxicology data while reducing the use of
animals.”
Currently, the CDC has numerous options for studying vaping without animals
including in vitro assays, in silico approaches, computational chemistry,
and a range of sophisticated tissue models that include 3D organoids and
organs-on-chips.
Organs on chips...
A growing number of biotech firms are offering innovative and
customizable platforms, such as Vitrocell®, which provides cigarette-smoking
machines and robots that have an attachment for e-cigarettes and can study
the impact of gases and other toxins on the lungs.
AAdditionally, MucilAir™ and EpiAirway™ are 3D tissue models made up of human
cells, both of which have been validated to offer human-relevant toxicology
data as a reliable, if not superior, alternative to animal testing.
Epithelix...
These technologies stand in stark contrast to the shocking brutality of
inhalation tests in which animals are confined in chambers or restraint
tubes that fill with noxious vapors, choking them and burning sensitive
tissues in the nose and throat.
EExperiments have placed mice in smoking chambers for 5 days a week for more
than a year. Conscious sheep were nasally intubated to force them to inhale
e-cigarette vapors. One company is receiving government funds to conduct
tests on cats, ferrets and dogs to develop new ways to expose animals to
fumes and vapors.
Mice inhalation tubes...
When the exposures are over, animals are often put through a range of
invasive procedures like tracheostomies and tracheal suction that introduce
tubes and other equipment into delicate breathing structures. Many
experiments inflict these painful and suffocating procedures on pregnant
mothers and their newborn babies.
Given the severe limitations and harsh cruelty of animal tests, the
availability of new technologies that perform better, and the direction of
the Strategic Roadmap to reduce animal tests, it is unjustifiable – indeed
unconscionable – to allow animals to die in the CDC experiments.
USE THIS FORM TO SEND AN EMAIL: Tell the CDC: Don't torture animals to study vaping!
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