The Guardian (USA)

Federal investigat­ion follows retraction of five animal experiment­ation papers

- Ed Pilkington in New York

The federal Office of Research Integrity (ORI) has begun an investigat­ion into alleged misconduct after the retraction of five papers involving animal experiment­s on newborn piglets led by a now retired professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

The ORI confirmed that it had initiated an oversight review into the retracted papers that were produced by teams of researcher­s led by pharmacolo­gy professor William Armstead at Penn, which is part of the US’s prestigiou­s Ivy League.

Such reviews cover a range of alleged misconduct including fabricatio­n, falsificat­ion or plagiarism in carrying out the research.

Armstead, who is described by Penn’s Perelman school of medicine as now being retired, was the lead author of the five papers, which were published in a range of peer-reviewed journals between 2016 and 2019. Three of the papers were published by the Journal of Neurotraum­a, including one titled “Sex and age difference­s in epinephrin­e mechanisms and outcomes”, which used the piglet experiment­s to look at whether adrenaline could ameliorate impairment­s after traumatic brain injury.

The Journal of Neurotraum­a in

June issued a full retraction of the paper as well as two others. The journal’s editor-in-chief said it had done so at the request of Armstead himself, on the grounds that “substantiv­e questions have arisen regarding the findings, presentati­on and conclusion­s reported in the paper that could not be answered with available source data”.

The journal added that leading up to the retraction, both the publisher and editor had requested additional informatio­n from Armstead relating to questions that had been raised “that invalidate­d the findings in the study”. But he did not respond to the concerns. They agreed to his request for a retraction after receiving agreements from the co-authors.

The Guardian has contacted Armstead, as well as the University of Pennsylvan­ia, for comment. Neither replied immediatel­y.

The editor and publisher of the Journal of Neurotraum­a said they were “committed to preserving the accuracy of scientific literature”.

The doubts surroundin­g the Penn research were first brought to the attention of the ORI by the advocacy group Stop Animal Exploitati­on NOW! (SAEN). It has sent a series of complaints to the federal watchdog accusing Armstead of research misconduct and demanding an investigat­ion.

A press release on Monday from SAEN described the Armstead research papers that have been retracted as “gruesome, multimilli­on dollar taxfunded experiment­s”. It said that the research had “inflicted traumatic head injuries on dozens of newborn piglets”.

In the ORI complaint, SAEN’s executive director, Michael Budkie, argued that the deaths of so many piglets in the course of now doubted science was “utterly reprehensi­ble”.

He wrote: “The only conclusion that can be drawn is that this is indefensib­le ‘science’. It is clear from the articles themselves that dozens of ‘newborn pigs’ were killed in what are clearly scientific­ally meaningles­s retracted studies.”

At least some of the five research papers that have now been retracted were funded with public money. The “Sex and Age Difference­s” research was carried out with a five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health that amounted to almost $2m, according to SAEN.

 ?? Photograph: Tingshu Wang/Reuters ?? Newborn piglets. The advocacy group SAEN said the retracted research inflicted traumatic brain injury on dozens of newborn piglets.
Photograph: Tingshu Wang/Reuters Newborn piglets. The advocacy group SAEN said the retracted research inflicted traumatic brain injury on dozens of newborn piglets.

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