Animal Study Registry

The Animal Study Registry is an online registry for the pre-registration of research studies involving animals.[1][2][3] Since January 7, 2019, the Animal Study Registry is online and can be used by scientists worldwide.

History

The reproducibility of animal test results in biomedical research has been questioned repeatedly in the past.[4][5][6] Discussions about this replication crisis have already reached the public. In clinical research, the call for transparency led to the introduction of clinical trial registries that disclose the experimental design of clinical trials before the study is conducted. In order to increase the transparency and the quality in the field of preclinical and basic research, the establishment of so-called centralized Animal Study Registries was suggested.[7][8] The German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), as a scientifically independent research institution, has decided to provide an international freely accessible platform for the pre-registration of studies involving animal experiments.

Goal

The causes for the replication crisis in biomedical research are being intensively discussed within the scientific community.[4][5] The publication bias was identified as one main reason for the lack of reproducibility of research results. This means, only significant and novel results are published while null results are never revealed, which leads to a distorted view of the state of research.[5]  Furthermore, poor study design, poor statistical planning and incomplete method description were, among others, identified as further reasons for non-reproducibility.[5]

The purpose of an Animal Study Registry is to register animal experiments with detailed information on methods, working hypotheses and biometric planning prior to the start of the study. Registration of the study plan could reduce the publication bias and prevent practices like data dredging. Indeed, Scientists would have to justify in the future why they differed from the original project planning or why some results were not published. The detailed query of the methods as well as the statistical planning supports the scientists in the study preparation and can thus increase the quality of as well as the reproducibility of the animal experiments. Results from animal experiments that are not published or whose informative value is impaired due to poor study quality can lead to animal experiments being unnecessarily repeated.

gollark: They explode if you run hot materials through them.
gollark: By the way, be sure to not use normal fluiducts for your piping.
gollark: Storage density isn't too hard a problem.
gollark: I mean, there are some cheap CC-turtle-based systems, but AE2 is cooler.
gollark: No longer shall we suffer the tyranny of sorting these chests by hand!

References

  1. "Animal Study Registry".
  2. Bert, Bettina; Heinl, Céline; Chmielewska, Justyna; Schwarz, Franziska; Grune, Barbara; Hensel, Andreas; Greiner, Matthias; Schönfelder, Gilbert (2019-10-15). "Refining animal research: The Animal Study Registry". PLOS Biology. 17 (10): e3000463. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3000463. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 6793840. PMID 31613875.
  3. Heinl, Céline; Chmielewska, Justyna; Olevska, Anastasia; Grune, Barbara; Schönfelder, Gilbert; Bert, Bettina (2020-01-07). "Rethinking the incentive system in science: animal study registries". EMBO Reports. 21 (1): e49709. doi:10.15252/embr.201949709. ISSN 1469-221X. PMC 6945056. PMID 31867805.
  4. Ioannidis, John P.A.; Trikalinos, Thomas A. (2007-04-10). "The appropriateness of asymmetry tests for publication bias in meta-analyses: a large survey". CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal. 176 (8): 1091–1096. doi:10.1503/cmaj.060410. ISSN 0820-3946. PMC 1839799. PMID 17420491.
  5. Baker, Monya (2016-05-26). "1,500 scientists lift the lid on reproducibility". Nature News. 533 (7604): 452–454. Bibcode:2016Natur.533..452B. doi:10.1038/533452a. PMID 27225100.
  6. Arrowsmith, John (2011-04-29). "Trial watch: Phase II failures: 2008–2010". Nature Reviews Drug Discovery. 10 (5): 328–329. doi:10.1038/nrd3439. ISSN 1474-1784. PMID 21532551.
  7. Kimmelman, Jonathan; Anderson, James A. (2012-06-07). "Should preclinical studies be registered?". Nature Biotechnology. 30 (6): 488–489. doi:10.1038/nbt.2261. ISSN 1546-1696. PMC 4516408. PMID 22678379.
  8. Strech, Daniel; Silva, Diego S.; Wieschowski, Susanne (2016-11-10). "Animal Study Registries: Results from a Stakeholder Analysis on Potential Strengths, Weaknesses, Facilitators, and Barriers". PLOS Biology. 14 (11): e2000391. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.2000391. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 5104355. PMID 27832101.


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