Abstract

Animal models have contributed significantly to our understanding of the underlying biological mechanisms of Alzheimer's disease (AD). As a result, over 300 interventions have been investigated and reported to mitigate pathological phenotypes or improve behavior in AD animal models or both. To date, however, very few of these findings have resulted in target validation in humans or successful translation to disease-modifying therapies. Challenges in translating preclinical studies to clinical trials include the inability of animal models to recapitulate the human disease, variations in breeding and colony maintenance, lack of standards in design, conduct and analysis of animal trials, and publication bias due to under-reporting of negative results in the scientific literature. The quality of animal model research on novel therapeutics can be improved by bringing the rigor of human clinical trials to animal studies. Research communities in several disease areas have developed recommendations for the conduct and reporting of preclinical studies in order to increase their validity, reproducibility, and predictive value. To address these issues in the AD community, the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation partnered with Charles River Discovery Services (Morrisville, NC, USA) and Cerebricon Ltd. (Kuopio, Finland) to convene an expert advisory panel of academic, industry, and government scientists to make recommendations on best practices for animal studies testing investigational AD therapies. The panel produced recommendations regarding the measurement, analysis, and reporting of relevant AD targets, th choice of animal model, quality control measures for breeding and colony maintenance, and preclinical animal study design. Major considerations to incorporate into preclinical study design include a priori hypotheses, pharmacokinetics-pharmacodynamics studies prior to proof-of-concept testing, biomarker measurements, sample size determination, and power analysis. The panel also recommended distinguishing between pilot 'exploratory' animal studies and more extensive 'therapeutic' studies to guide interpretation. Finally, the panel proposed infrastructure and resource development, such as the establishment of a public data repository in which both positive animal studies and negative ones could be reported. By promoting best practices, these recommendations can improve the methodological quality and predictive value of AD animal studies and make the translation to human clinical trials more efficient and reliable.

Highlights

  • Animal models have contributed significantly to our understanding of the underlying biological mechanisms of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)

  • Our advisory panel produced recommendations in regard to the measurement, analysis, and reporting of relevant targets in AD animal models. These recommendations stressed the need for quality control measures in breeding and colony maintenance to manage phenotypic variability and outlined key issues related to preclinical animal study design

  • Distinguishing between exploratory and therapeutic animal studies will aid in defining the scope of the study and the interpretation of results and hopefully will bring some of the rigor of industry preclinical testing to the academic space

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Summary

Study design

Efficacy data should be assessed through multiple outcome measures. Efficacy results should be demonstrated in more than one model. Standardize commonly used protocols To be better able to compare and pool research results, it is important to improve quality control measures across laboratories. Focus on novel targets and outcome measures More emphasis should be placed on non-amyloid disease processes and pathways (Box 1), including those related to neuroprotection, synaptic plasticity, oxidative stress, inflammation, vascular targets, mitochondria, and energy use. The Morris water maze, a spatial memory test that can be very sensitive to hippocampal function, is most commonly employed, but alternatives are available that may detect more subtle changes or may be more readily translatable – including attentional set shifting, delayed non-match-to-sample, recognition memory (novel object recognition), discrimination and reversal learning, contextual fear conditioning, and olfaction-based assays – or both [24,25,26]. In animal models that can be used in human clinical trials to better predict outcomes

Conclusions
Findings
Geerts H
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