Many cancers can be cured today—if you are a mouse. Unfortunately, 
humans are still waiting for cancer cures that will work for them. Decades of animal-based laboratory tests have
 given us some treatments for mice who are genetically and otherwise 
manipulated to grow tumors. But if we are seeking medical advances for 
humans, are animal-based experiments really the most effective way to 
spend our limited resources?
One woman said it to me this way: “If my child was dying, and an 
animal experiment might find the cure that saves her life, then I 
wouldn’t hesitate to sacrifice those animals.” Most of us would make 
enormous sacrifices to save our children, and that’s completely 
understandable. But to think only in terms of “my child vs. a mouse in a
 laboratory” misses the essential question we should be asking: Does 
testing on animals actually yield useful results? I’d like to share a 
personal story that changed my beliefs about animal testing.
You may remember the drug thalidomide. It was widely prescribed in 
many countries in the early 1960s for several purposes, one of which was
 to alleviate morning sickness in pregnant women. The drug caused severe
 birth defects, and thousands of children were born with shortened limbs
 and flipper-like hands. Thalidomide was animal-tested before it was 
used in people, and no adverse effects were reported. Even after the 
human tragedy started to unfold, subsequent animal testing of 
thalidomide found similar birth defects in only a few species of animal,
 and only at very high doses. Simply put, animal tests of thalidomide 
were not predictive of the effects in humans.
I narrowly escaped being one of the thalidomide babies myself. My 
mother was traveling in the U.K. during the first months that she was 
pregnant with me. She had severe morning sickness, so she visited a 
doctor who prescribed a medication. She took the pills for several 
weeks, and only when she returned home to the U.S. did she hear about 
thalidomide on the news. Mom recently told me about her reaction: “My 
heart just sank when I heard the news story. I had never asked for the 
name of the medication I took, and I was certain that it was 
thalidomide. I still had the bottle and was relieved to discover it was a
 different drug. I never could have forgiven myself if I had done this 
to you.”
After I found out how lucky I am to be whole and healthy, I started 
to wonder just how useful animal testing really is. Historically, 
experiments on animals have been given credit for much more than what 
they actually helped us learn. And in modern medical science, with its 
focus on cellular and molecular function, the differences between 
species far outweigh the similarities. In fact, many drugs have 
measurably different effects in men and women—how much greater are the 
differences between humans and other animal species? Not only does 
testing on animals give misleading results about the risks of drugs in 
people, but it can also delay discovery of useful human therapies. 
Penicillin is harmful to guinea pigs, rats, and hamsters. (It was a 
human trial that opened the door to the discovery of antibiotic drugs.) 
The painkiller Vioxx was withdrawn from the market after it was found to
 increase risk of heart attacks and strokes and was found to be 
responsible for many deaths. Vioxx was tested in several species of 
animals, and the results suggested that the drug would have 
heart-protective properties. All new medications and therapies must 
eventually be tested in human clinical trials, and results from animal 
testing can give a false sense of security about potential risks to 
human patients. The FDA admits that an astounding 92 percent of all 
drugs that test safe and effective in animals fail in human clinical 
trials. And half of the 8 percent of drugs that appear successful in 
human tests have to be withdrawn after they are marketed because of 
adverse reactions.
The good news is that modern medical science offers many alternative research
 methods that more accurately predict human results. In vitro testing on
 human cell cultures, computer modeling, epidemiological analysis, and 
clinical studies can all be used to develop and test new therapies. 95 
percent of medical schools have
 shut down their animal laboratories and rely instead on cadavers, 
simulators, and observation to train medical students on what they 
really need to know: how the human body works.
 
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