Can prospective systematic reviews of animal studies improve clinical translation?

被引:0
作者
Pandora Pound
Merel Ritskes-Hoitinga
机构
[1] Safer Medicines Trust,SYRCLE, Department for Health Evidence
[2] Radboud University Medical Center,undefined
来源
Journal of Translational Medicine | / 18卷
关键词
Systematic review; Preclinical; Animal research; Translation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Systematic reviews are powerful tools with the potential to generate high quality evidence. Their application to animal studies has been instrumental in exposing the poor quality of these studies, as well as a catalyst for improvements in study design, conduct and reporting. It has been suggested that prospective systematic reviews of animal studies (i.e. systematic reviews conducted prior to clinical trials) would allow scrutiny of the preclinical evidence, providing valuable information on safety and efficacy, and helping to determine whether clinical trials should proceed. However, while prospective systematic reviews allow valuable scrutiny of the preclinical animal data, they are not necessarily able to reliably predict the safety and efficacy of an intervention when trialled in humans. Consequently, they may not reliably safeguard humans participating in clinical trials and might potentially result in lost opportunities for beneficial clinical treatments. Furthermore, animal and human studies are often conducted concurrently, which not only makes prospective systematic reviews of animal studies impossible, but suggests that animal studies do not inform human studies in the manner presumed. We suggest that this points to a confused attitude regarding animal studies, whereby tradition demands that they precede human studies but practice indicates that their findings are often ignored. We argue that it is time to assess the relative contributions of animal and human research in order to better understand how clinical knowledge is actually produced.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Quality assessment of observational studies is not commonplace in systematic reviews
    Mallen, Christian
    Peat, George
    Croft, Peter
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2006, 59 (08) : 765 - 769
  • [42] Healthspan, Translation, and New Outcomes for Animal Studies of Aging
    Kirkland, James L.
    Peterson, Charlotte
    JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES A-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2009, 64 (02): : 209 - 212
  • [43] Systematic reviews: guidance relevant for studies of older people
    Shenkin, Susan D.
    Harrison, Jennifer K.
    Wilkinson, Tim
    Dodds, Richard M.
    Ioannidis, John P. A.
    AGE AND AGEING, 2017, 46 (05) : 722 - 728
  • [44] Can Exergaming Promote Physical Fitness and Physical Activity? A Systematic Review of Systematic Reviews
    Kari, Tuomas
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GAMING AND COMPUTER-MEDIATED SIMULATIONS, 2014, 6 (04) : 59 - 77
  • [45] Clinical effectiveness and safety of acupotomy: An overview of systematic reviews
    Kwon, Chan-Young
    Yoon, Sang-Hoon
    Lee, Boram
    COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2019, 36 : 142 - 152
  • [46] A guide to conducting systematic reviews of clinical laboratory tests
    Don-Wauchope, Andrew C.
    Rodriguez-Capote, Karina
    Assaad, Ramy Samir
    Bhargava, Seema
    Zemlin, Annalise E.
    CLINICAL CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE, 2024, 62 (02) : 218 - 233
  • [47] Systematic reviews of clinical practice guidelines: a methodological guide
    Johnston, Amy
    Kelly, Shannon E.
    Hsieh, Shu-Ching
    Skidmore, Becky
    Wells, George A.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2019, 108 : 64 - 76
  • [48] Complementary therapies for clinical depression: an overview of systematic reviews
    Haller, Heidemarie
    Anheyer, Dennis
    Cramer, Holger
    Dobos, Gustav
    BMJ OPEN, 2019, 9 (08):
  • [49] The impact of antiseizure medication on bone heath: A systematic review of animal studies
    Parveen, Bushra
    Penumallu, Naveen Reddy
    Shaik, Abdul Rahaman
    Parveen, Abida
    Parveen, Rabea
    Vohora, Divya
    EPILEPSY RESEARCH, 2024, 200
  • [50] Quality assessment tools used in systematic reviews of in vitro studies: A systematic review
    Linh Tran
    Dao Ngoc Hien Tam
    Abdelrahman Elshafay
    Thao Dang
    Kenji Hirayama
    Nguyen Tien Huy
    BMC Medical Research Methodology, 21