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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) no longer requires new drugs to be tested in animals before being approved. Thanks to a law passed in December 2022 (opens in new tab) , the agency now has the option to approve drugs that are tested in only non-animal studies, including those that use lab-grown tissues or computer models, before being tested in clinical trials with humans. 

But is that safe, and will it happen any time soon? For now, no one should expect a dramatic shift in how drug developers bring medicines to market, experts told Live Science.

“I think it’s going to be a while before this actually gets implemented in full force,” Vivek Gupta (opens in new tab) , an associate professor of industrial pharmacy at St. John’s University told Live Science. Gupta is also the scientific founder of PulmoSIM Therapeutics, a subsidiary of VeriSIM Life that develops therapies for rare and progressive respiratory diseases. 

That’s because, although promising non-animal models have recently been developed, these technologies are “still in their infancy,” Jim Newman (opens in new tab) , communications director at Americans for Medical Progress, which advocates for the use of animal research, wrote in a Feb. 1 statement (opens in new tab) . 

Related: Why do medical researchers use mice? 

Previously, the FDA typically required drugs be tested in one rodent and one nonrodent species, before they were moved into human trials, Science reported (opens in new tab) . These animal tests help reveal how drugs break down in the body, whether they reach the tissues they’re intended to target and whether they exert the intended effects on those tissues — without having harmful side effects. But they’re not perfect: more than 90% of drugs that pass initial animal tests end up being unsafe or ineffective in humans, according to a 2019 review in the journal Translational Medicine Communications (opens in new tab) .

Research groups developing alternatives to animal testing aim to find different models that capture this same information, or better yet, ones that accurately predict exactly how a drug will behave in people. 

Dr. Donald Ingber (opens in new tab) , the founding director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, agreed with Gupta’s assessment that the implementation of the new law will be gradual. “It’ll still be a while, I think, before we really see the impact of this,” Ingber told Live Science.

One of the biggest hurdles will be convincing drug developers to adopt new, non-animal testing methods, he said. The companies will want to see evidence that the models show equivalent or superior performance to animal testing, and reassurance that the FDA views the tests as robust before they heavily invest in new technology. Once they do, that will provide the FDA with more evidence that these tests can replace animal testing.

“I think it’s going to happen over the next couple years, one by one, drugs including data from these models,” said Ingber, whose lab develops “organ chips” — small devices that contain living human tissues and flowing fluids that mimic the inner workings of full-size organs. These organ chips, which can be used in drug testing, are being commercialized by Emulate, a biotech company of which Ingber is a board member.

This is an example of the “Organ Chip” platform developed at the Wyss Institute and subsequently licensed to Emulate, Inc. (Image credit: Harvard’s Wyss Institute)

Still, replacing animal models with organ chips will “occur gradually,” as each system will have to be validated for a specific purpose, to show how a drug is absorbed by the colon or whether it damages heart cells, for example, Ingber wrote in his review. 

What’s more, “true validation of their use as animal replacements will require large-scale evaluation involving hundreds of devices of the same design carried out using the same protocols,” a feat that will require regulatory agencies and drug companies to work together to standardize their validation methods and performance criteria, he added.

Related: Tiny ‘hearts’ self-assemble in lab dishes and even beat like the real thing

Other promising alternatives to animal testing are organoids, or 3D clusters of lab-grown cells that can mimic key biological features of full-size organs. These organized clumps, often derived from stem cells and grown on physical scaffolding, are especially useful for observing cell- and tissue-level drug responses, as well as assessing how well drugs latch onto their molecular targets, Ingber said.

“In the same ballpark” of organoids are spheroids — simpler 3D clusters of cells that are often used to model cancerous tumors, Gupta said. Gupta, who studies lung cancer, works with spheroids grown from primary cell lines, which are populations of cells sampled directly from human patients and can only replicate a few times; that’s in contrast to so-called immortalized cell lines, which can be grown indefinitely. 

Although often more difficult to obtain than immortal cells, primary cells better capture what happens in a human patient, Gupta explained. RELATED STORIES—Fatal ‘brain-eating’ amoeba successfully treated with repurposed UTI drug

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Alongside these models constructed from cells are those built using computers. For instance, scientists have built computer models to assess drug toxicity — one model, described in a 2018 report in the journal Frontiers in Physiology (opens in new tab) , predicts whether a given drug could have toxic effects on the heart. 

“As the AI-based models become more and more robust, as more and more data gets fed into them, I think they are able to provide a fairly accurate prediction,” Gupta said. Perfecting these AI-based models will be essential in getting rid of the early stage animal tests that assess how drugs get broken down in the body and interact with different tissues, he said.  

As more drug developers invest in and perfect organ chips, organoids and AI-based models the need for animal studies may gradually shrink. In the meantime, “I think the FDA will be happy to review the data,” Ingber said. “If they see data that they believe are convincing, they can use it,” he said.

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World

Trump warns Hamas – and claims Israel has agreed to 60-day ceasefire in Gaza

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Trump warns Hamas - and claims Israel has agreed to 60-day ceasefire in Gaza

Analysis: Many unanswered questions remain

In the long Gaza war, this is a significant moment.

For the people of Gaza, for the hostages and their families – this could be the moment it ends. But we have been here before, so many times.

The key question – will Hamas accept what Israel has agreed to: a 60-day ceasefire?

At the weekend, a source at the heart of the negotiations told me: “Both Hamas and Israel are refusing to budge from their position – Hamas wants the ceasefire to last until a permanent agreement is reached. Israel is opposed to this. At this point only President Trump can break this deadlock.”

The source added: “Unless Trump pushes, we are in a stalemate.”

The problem is that the announcement made now by Donald Trump – which is his social-media-summarised version of whatever Israel has actually agreed to – may just amount to Israel’s already-established position.

We don’t know the details and conditions attached to Israel’s proposals.

Would Israeli troops withdraw from Gaza? Totally? Or partially? How many Palestinian prisoners would they agree to release from Israel’s jails? And why only 60 days? Why not a total ceasefire? What are they asking of Hamas in return? We just don’t know the answers to any of these questions, except one.

We do know why Israel wants a 60-day ceasefire, not a permanent one. It’s all about domestic politics.

If Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was to agree now to a permanent ceasefire, the extreme right-wingers in his coalition would collapse his government.

Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich have both been clear about their desire for the war to continue. They hold the balance of power in Mr Netanyahu’s coalition.

If Mr Netanyahu instead agrees to just 60 days – which domestically he can sell as just a pause – then that may placate the extreme right-wingers for a few weeks until the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, is adjourned for the summer.

It is also no coincidence that the US president has called for Mr Netanyahu’s corruption trial to be scrapped.

Without the prospect of jail, Mr Netanyahu might be more willing to quit the war safe in the knowledge that focus will not shift immediately to his own political and legal vulnerability.

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UK

The PM faced down his party on welfare and lost. I suspect things may only get worse

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The PM faced down his party on welfare and lost. I suspect things may only get worse

So much for an end to chaos and sticking plaster politics.

Yesterday, Sir Keir Starmer abandoned his flagship welfare reforms at the eleventh hour – hectic scenes in the House of Commons that left onlookers aghast.

Facing possible defeat on his welfare bill, the PM folded in a last-minute climbdown to save his skin.

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Welfare bill passes second reading

The decision was so rushed that some government insiders didn’t even know it was coming – as the deputy PM, deployed as a negotiator, scrambled to save the bill or how much it would cost.

“Too early to answer, it’s moved at a really fast pace,” said one.

The changes were enough to whittle back the rebellion to 49 MPs as the prime minister prevailed, but this was a pyrrhic victory.

Sir Keir lost the argument with his own backbenchers over his flagship welfare reforms, as they roundly rejected his proposed cuts to disability benefits for existing claimants or future ones, without a proper review of the entire personal independence payment (PIP) system first.

PM wins key welfare vote – follow latest

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Welfare bill blows ‘black hole’ in chancellor’s accounts

That in turn has blown a hole in the public finances, as billions of planned welfare savings are shelved.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves now faces the prospect of having to find £5bn.

As for the politics, the prime minister has – to use a war analogy – spilled an awful lot of blood for little reward.

He has faced down his MPs and he has lost.

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‘Lessons to learn’, says Kendall

They will be emboldened from this and – as some of those close to him admit – will find it even harder to govern.

After the vote, in central lobby, MPs were already saying that the government should regard this as a reset moment for relations between No 10 and the party.

The prime minister always said during the election that he would put country first and party second – and yet, less than a year into office, he finds himself pinned back by his party and blocked from making what he sees are necessary reforms.

I suspect it will only get worse. When I asked two of the rebel MPs how they expected the government to cover off the losses in welfare savings, Rachael Maskell, a leading rebel, suggested the government introduce welfare taxes.

Meanwhile, Work and Pensions Select Committee chair Debbie Abrahams told me “fiscal rules are not natural laws” – suggesting the chancellor could perhaps borrow more to fund public spending.

Read more:
How did your MP vote?
Welfare cuts branded ‘Dickensian’

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Should the govt slash the welfare budget?

These of course are both things that Ms Reeves has ruled out.

But the lesson MPs will take from this climbdown is that – if they push hard in enough and in big enough numbers – the government will give ground.

The fallout for now is that any serious cuts to welfare – something the PM says is absolutely necessary – are stalled for the time being, with the Stephen Timms review into PIP not reporting back until November 2026.

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Tearful MP urges govt to reconsider

Had the government done this differently and reviewed the system before trying to impose the cuts – a process only done ahead of the Spring Statement in order to help the chancellor fix her fiscal black hole – they may have had more success.

Those close to the PM say he wants to deliver on the mandate the country gave him in last year’s election, and point out that Sir Keir Starmer is often underestimated – first as party leader and now as prime minister.

But on this occasion, he underestimated his own MPs.

His job was already difficult enough – and after this it will be even harder still.

If he can’t govern his party, he can’t deliver change he promised.

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Politics

US sanctions crypto wallet tied to ransomware, infostealer host

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US sanctions crypto wallet tied to ransomware, infostealer host

US sanctions crypto wallet tied to ransomware, infostealer host

The US Treasury has sanctioned a crypto wallet containing $350,000 tied to the alleged cybercrime hosting service Aeza Group.

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