Are some animal models more equal than others?: A case study on the translational value of animal models of efficacy for Alzheimer's disease

Publication date

2019

Authors

Veening-Griffioen, Désirée HISNI 0000000492860963
Ferreira, Guilherme SISNI 0000000506383708
van Meer, Peter J.K.ISNI 0000000395174486
Boon, WouterORCID 0000-0003-1218-193XISNI 0000000392975288
Gispen-de Wied, Christine C.
Moors, EllenORCID 0000-0002-9724-5308ISNI 0000000045359886
Schellekens, HuubISNI 0000000115645352

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Clinical trial failures (>99%) in Alzheimer's disease are in stark contrast to positive efficacy data in animals. We evaluated the correlation between animal and clinical efficacy outcomes (cognition) in Alzheimer's disease using data from registered drugs as well as interventions tested in phase II or III clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease. We identified 20 interventions, which were tested in 208 animal studies in 63 different animal models. Clinical outcome was correlated with animal results in 58% of cases. But, individual animal models showed divergent results across interventions, individual interventions showed divergent results across animal models, and animal model outcomes were determined with 16 different methods. This result is unsurprising due to poor external validity (what do we model) of the animal models. Although the animal models all share Alzheimer's disease symptoms, none represents the whole syndrome. Investigators did not motivate why one model was chosen over another, and did not consider the ways the disease phenomena were generated (spontaneous, (experimentally) induced or by genetic modification), or the species characteristics, which determine the outcomes. The explanation for the lack of correlation between animal and human outcomes can be manifold: the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease is not reflected in the animal model or the outcomes are not comparable. Our conclusion is that currently no animal models exist which are predictive for the efficacy of interventions for Alzheimer's disease.

Keywords

Animal model, Drug development, Efficacy model, External validity, Alzheimer's disease, Translational research, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Veening-Griffioen, D H, Ferreira, G S, van Meer, P J K, Boon, W P C, Gispen-de Wied, C C, Moors, E H M & Schellekens, H 2019, 'Are some animal models more equal than others? A case study on the translational value of animal models of efficacy for Alzheimer's disease', European Journal of Pharmacology, vol. 859, 172524, pp. 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2019.172524