Albuquerque Journal

FDA suspending monkey research

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The Food and Drug Administra­tion has suspended experiment­s on the effects of nicotine in squirrel monkeys, research aimed at better understand­ing one of the most pernicious of addictions.

Two weeks ago, British primatolog­ist Jane Goodall wrote to FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb, urging an end to what she called “cruel and unnecessar­y” and “shameful” research.

On Monday, he responded, saying that he had put a hold on the study this month “after learning of concerns related to the study you referenced.” He also said he has sent a medical team of primate experts to the FDA facility — the National Center for Toxicologi­cal Research in Arkansas — “to evaluate the safety and well-being of the monkeys and to understand whether there are additional precaution­s needed.”

The research involved training adolescent and adult squirrel monkeys to press a lever to give themselves infusions of nicotine. Four monkeys in the studies, which began in 2014, have died, according to people close to the situation. The deaths are still being investigat­ed, but nicotine overdose isn’t seen as the likely cause.

Gottlieb also told Goodall that he has appointed an FDA team, including senior career officials and guided by primate veterinari­ans, to assess the “science and integrity” of the animal research process for the study and whether the research should be resumed. If the study is terminated, he said, the monkeys will be sent to an alternativ­e location that can provide appropriat­e long-term care.

An FDA spokeswoma­n said the agency is also considerin­g creating a wider-ranging “function that would provide for even greater oversight of the care of animals in the agency’s possession.”

The FDA actions represent the latest change in how the federal government treats research animals. In 2015, the National Institutes of Health said it would no longer support biomedical research on chimpanzee­s. The Department of Veterans Affairs said Monday that it would step up its oversight of experiment­s on dogs after an investigat­ion found canine deaths at a Virginia research facility, USA Today reported.

Goodall was enlisted in the fight against the monkey tests by the White Coat Waste Project, an advocacy group.

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