Ensuring animal welfare while meeting scientific aims using a murine pneumonia model of septic shock

O Huet, D Ramsey, S Miljavec, A Jenney, C Aubron… - Shock, 2013 - journals.lww.com
O Huet, D Ramsey, S Miljavec, A Jenney, C Aubron, A Aprico, N Stefanovic, B Balkau
Shock, 2013journals.lww.com
With animal models, death as an intentional end point is ethically unacceptable. However, in
the study of septic shock, death is still considered the only relevant end point. We defined
eight humane end points into four stages of severity (from healthy to moribund) and used to
design a clinically relevant scoring tool, termed “the mouse clinical assessment score for
sepsis”(M-CASS). The M-CASS was used to enable a consistent approach to the
assessment of disease severity. This allowed an ethical and objective assessment of …
Abstract
With animal models, death as an intentional end point is ethically unacceptable. However, in the study of septic shock, death is still considered the only relevant end point. We defined eight humane end points into four stages of severity (from healthy to moribund) and used to design a clinically relevant scoring tool, termed “the mouse clinical assessment score for sepsis”(M-CASS). The M-CASS was used to enable a consistent approach to the assessment of disease severity. This allowed an ethical and objective assessment of disease after which euthanasia was performed, instead of worsening suffering. The M-CASS displayed a high internal consistency (Cronbach α= 0.97) with a high level of agreement and an intraclass correlation coefficient equal to 0.91. The plasma levels of cytokines and markers of oxidative stress were all associated with the M-CASS score (Kruskal-Wallis test, P< 0.05). The M-CASS allows tracking of disease progression and animal welfare requirements.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins