Category Archive | Science

March 26, 2007 | Monday

When campaigners collide

The misuse of science by campaign groups to promote their cause is all around us. But it has not gone unnoticed. Debates about the weight of evidence for or against scientific topics such as climate change, homeopathy or the safety of vaccinations are widespread. See for example the excellent column and blog by Guardian writer Ben Goldacre on ‘bad science’. This week, Goldacre points out that ‘as long as you cherry pick the data and keep one eye half closed, you can prove anything with science’.

But what happens when the objectives of groups campaigning on different themes are in conflict. This is the messy situation highlighted in a recent Political Update from the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV). The Update complains about a Greenpeace commissioned study which has concluded that a strain of genetically modified (GM) maize, approved for sale by the European commission, has shown signs of toxicity in laboratory rats. Greenpeace is claiming that such GM food poses significant health risks, but the BUAV responds that this study demonstrates little more than the supposed limitations of animal tests.

Both parties are guilty of distorting science by simply interpreting evidence as they wish to see it.

March 20, 2007 | Tuesday

Sensible science from Animal Farm

At last, a science documentary that’s engaging, doesn’t dumb down science too much and doesn’t create fake controversy (see last week’s New Scientist article about technological populism - we see all too many examples of that). And the mini series is mostly about animals – not natural history, but the science of genetic modification.

Animal Farm is the sort of programme that perhaps only Channel 4 has the guts to commission. It avoids the Brave New World and Frankenstein cliches, although it does include some weird and wonderful animals (mostly used in food production). The concept involves two presenters who investigate GM from different perspectives but in a very straightforward way. Dr Olivia Judson is an enthusiastic scientist, while Giles Coren is a sceptical foodie. I loved Sam Wollaston’s review in today’s Guardian which characterised both of them as GM creatures.

But there should have been more rigorous testing of the GM food. It’s all very well Giles Coren appealing to the yuk factor and having his prejudices confirmed by the apparently bland taste of his ‘GM’ steak, but where was the blind taste test?

Next week I’m hoping to see some cute mice instead of featherless chickens and muscle bound cattle. The real benefits of genetically modifying animals are in medical research, which uses close to one million GM mice every year in the UK alone.

March 07, 2007 | Wednesday

Do zebrafish need environmental enrichment?

The topic of discussion for a meeting tomorrow of an organisation known as the Laboratory Animal Science Association seemed to me initially to be taking welfare to slightly crazy heights.

After all, although zebrafish are fast becoming the model of choice for many biologists, I thought that they were primarily used for study of the embryo and development – not too much scope for pond weed and treasure chests there. Even if adult fish are in labs there’s hot debate about whether fish actually perceive pain or discomfort as we know it; and how much enrichment does a fish need?

I was soon educated: one of the fastest Google searches I’ve ever done (’zebrafish’ and ‘enrichment’) returned a very pertinent article among the top hits, Evolution of Standards in the Care and Use of Zebrafish in the Jan 2007 issue of Animal Lab News. 

It turns out that zebrafish use is expanding because (i):

February 19, 2007 | Monday

Proponents of pseudoscience unite!

Climate change sceptics, peddlers of ID and antivivisectionists all have one thing in common – a tendency to cherry-pick, or failing that, bastardise, science so that it seems to support their view.

This quote from Nature could be used to describe all three groups (although the article reference is about climate change sceptics).

"Their argument continues to shift,” says Naomi Oreskes, a geologist and science historian at the University of California, San Diego. “That makes it clear that the issue for them is not the science. Whatever the science is, they will try to find ways to question it.”

Climate change 2007: Climate sceptics switch focus to economics, Michael Hopkin
Nature 445, 8th Feb 2007, doi:10.1038/445582a

This spoof site about the dangers of ‘dihydrogen monoxide’ (water to the non-chemically minded) shows how anything can be supported by corkscrewed ‘science’.

Whilst we’re on the subject of pseudoscience, some of you may remember this blog of mine, Scientific method overthrown!

February 16, 2007 | Friday

Making babies

A human fertility drug has helped a gorilla conceive and have a healthy baby.  It was discovered that Salome, a western lowland gorilla at Bristol Zoo Gardens suffered from diminished ovarian reserve – a condition previously only diagnosed in humans (see full story at BBC online, Fertility treatment aids gorilla).  Western lowland gorillas are endangered, so anything that increases the success of breeding is crucial to saving the species.

This is another classic example of how animal research benefits both humans and animals – primates are used in reproductive research owing to their similar reproductive anatomy, endocrinology and other physiological features compared to humans… Now the karmic wheel has turned and primates are benefiting in return.

See also Bonobos treated for heart disease

February 05, 2007 | Monday

Overcoming obstacles in reducing primate use

The National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs) has today issued a press release claiming that the use of primates in drug testing could be reduced in certain circumstances—in this case for the testing of monoclonal antibodies.

RDS strongly supports this targeted approach to identifying opportunities for reducing animal use. According to the NC3Rs, the next stage is to identify and tackle the obstacles, particularly around the validation and international acceptance of alternative tests by regulatory authorities. Questioning the scientific appropriateness of the primate model is also an important part of the work. The scientific community has never tried to pretend that animal models are perfect, or can deliver all the answers with total reliability, so the need for critical scrutiny and appraisal will always be relevant.

This is exactly the kind of valuable work which the NC3Rs should be undertaking, and is supported by the principle of a Parliamentary motion which already has the support of over 40 MPs. Please ask your own MP to support this ‘EDM number 429’.

Cargo Cult antivivisection

I saw two mentions of Cargo Cult science on Saturday. I’d never heard of it before, so I went to look it up. Its relevance to animal research and antivivisection? Well, read on and judge for yourself.

Cargo Cult science was a term coined by the late great physicist Richard Feynman. He outlines the story in the book Surely you’re joking, Mr Feynman:

January 18, 2007 | Thursday

European Parliament Declaration on primates in science

A written declaration of five Members of the European Parliament on primates in scientific experiments was tabled last September. Such a statement is the equivalent of an Early Day Motion (EDM) in the UK Parliament. It has received 59 signatures (the EU Parliament has 732 members) so far. According to European Parliament rules, declarations only need to be discussed in the Parliament if more than half of the MEPs have signed it. The Declaration lapsed last Thursday (18 January 07).
The declaration is full of false claims:

January 10, 2007 | Wednesday

Dust settles on Duff report

Antivivisection groups are still claiming that the clinical trial tragedy at Northwick Park Hospital was caused by a failure of animal studies. For example, a recent post by a previously unknown Marius Maxwell on the website of the antivivisection group VERO claims that ’imprecise animal-based research‘, including on TG1412 ’is reflected in tens of thousands of unnecessary human deaths‘. This Maxwell, who writes very imprecisely (we assume he means TGN1412), leaves strangely little information about where he works, his expertise or experience. Although he claims to be a neurosurgeon, how he is qualified to make such sweeping statements is left entirely open.

If it was true that animal research was to blame at Northwick Park, then that would imply that the thousands of other phase I clinical trials which have been run successfully over recent years were a shining testament to the success of animal research. A failure rate of less than 0.1 per cent can’t be bad.

But as ever, it’s not that simple. We can now turn to the genuinely expert views found in the so-called Duff Report, published in December 2006 by the Expert Scientific Group (ESG) that was set up to investigate the very serious adverse reactions that occurred in the first-in-man clinical trial of TGN1412.

January 05, 2007 | Friday

BMJ vote for top medical milestones

Needless to say, animal research is a main feature of several of the 15 listed. They are a strangely mixed bag, ranging from whole disciplines such as immunology to specific advances such as chlorpromazine for schizophrenia. Voting for any one in preference to the others is almost impossible.

Although not necessarily directly acknowledged (reference is usually to technologies that directly rely on animal research eg vaccines) in all the entries, it’s the keystone of five of the landmarks listed (monoclonal antibodies, antibiotics, anaesthesia, vaccines and tissue culture).

In addition, it is implicated – again through research or technologies relying on animal research – in five others; even in some that are more concept than hard science (eg evidence-based medicine and the promise of genetics).

Of the remaining five that don’t reference animal research (or its dependent technologies), three are speculative/ concept entries or societal actions that impacted on human health.  Although the importance of events such as sanitation cannot be denied, some – including an advocate of a different medical landmark in the list – have wondered whether they qualify as a ‘medical milestone’:

January 03, 2007 | Wednesday

More microdosing mumbo jumbo

Good to see that the crack troops at SAS (Sense About Science) have included misguided mumbo jumbo about microdosing in their celebrity slag-off today. Apparently TV actress Jenny Seagrove (of Waitrose ads and Judge John Deed fame) said that microdosing could replace ‘animals and primates’ (so primates are not animals?) in research. Pharmacologist Professor Nancy Rothwell, Vice President for Research at Manchester University and chair of RDS, countered:

The mistake is understandable Jenny, but microdosing is a technique for measuring how small doses of drugs move around the body. It has not yet been properly validated, but in the future it may replace some animal tests. Unfortunately, if we want new medicines for diseases like cancer or cystic fibrosis, there are some cases where there are no alternatives to using animals.

Also animal-rights-inspired was Heather Mills McCartney’s feeble attempt to link milk drinking and obesity. See more nonsense from the celebs, and sense from the scientists, in a leaflet on the SAS website and some excellent reporting by The Guardian and the BBC. The Sun got in the act, too, with Profs Rap Dim Star Comments. Mental images of Professors rapping about astronomy. Hmmm.

December 19, 2006 | Tuesday

No place for absolutism

Interesting feature on the animal experimentation debate in last week’s science journal Nature. Amongst other things, they did an anonymous international online poll of nearly 1700 biomedical researchers. About half of them used animals in their research.

When asked to rate how necessary animal research was for progressing biomedical science on a scale of 1 (not at all necessary) to 4 (essential), three quarters of all respondents, including those who did not work with animals themselves, said it was essential. About a fifth rated it as 3, and only a tiny minority (about 1%) thought it unnecessary. So much for antivivisection claims that lots of scientists oppose animal research.

Nature commented that: 

December 15, 2006 | Friday

If at first you don't succeed ... slice the salami a bit thinner

The Guardian today published a short news item Many animal tests are badly flawed, say scientists. This news item was based on a paper in this week’s British Medical Journal, and the subject of a BMJ press release.

I thought it looked very familiar. I checked, and it seems this is research published as a report on the University of Birmingham website six months ago. I thought its conclusions were a bit dodgy then and I blogged it here.

This is just the same research redrafted for the BMJ. If at first you don’t succeed in getting publicity, just redraft your paper and get it published in a different place. If you’re lucky you might then get the national newspapers interested in a story based on an exaggeration that is six months old anyway.

Rather than bury this as a comment on an old blog entry I thought I’d follow their example and do a new one to put it right at the top.

December 12, 2006 | Tuesday

Yet another scientific enquiry

There can be few areas of scientific research which have been subject to so much public debate and scrutiny, as well as detailed scientific investigation, as the use of animals in research.

Today we see the publication of yet another in-depth enquiry - the report of the Weatherall Committee into The Use of Non-Human Primates in Research. Like all the other enquiries before it, this one concludes that there is a strong scientific case for the carefully regulated use of animals in research - in this case non-human primates.

Will the animal rights groups take any notice of this report? We barely need to ask the question. They will never accept the results of any enquiry unless it gives them the answer they want (ie total abolition of animal research) - and that is unlikely for the foreseeable future.

December 08, 2006 | Friday

Clinical trials and bombs - the media reports

The BBC 10 o’clock news on 7th December showed how media coverage of the issue of the use of animals in research has moved on. A report on the Northwick Park drug trial was followed by a report on the conviction of an animal rights bomber

First of all what about the drug trial? The official report focused on what it should; learning from problems and the impact on the volunteer who was affected.  We certainly should learn from this episode, just because things go right most of the time does not mean we cannot learn and change. However animal testing abolitionist groups continue to say that the animal tests failed, this shows a general failure, and all animal testing should be stopped. An example from the BUAV:

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