54943 North Main Street
Mattawan, MI 49071-9399
Phone: 269-668-3336
Fax: 269-668-4151
www.mpiresearch.com
Contact Person: Dr. Jim Laveglia
Email: Jim.Laveglia@mpiresearch.com
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MPI Research Invites
2004 American College of Toxicology
Attendees to Hear Dr. Ted Baird Discuss
the Use of Mini-Swine for Evaluation
of Cardiovascular Safety of New Drugs
|
| 2004-11-03 |
MPI Research is pleased
to announce that Theodore Baird, Ph.D.
will be speaking at the upcoming American
College Of Toxicology meeting in Palm Springs,
California. As a part of the Safety Pharmacology
symposium on Tuesday, November 9, Dr. Baird
will be discussing the use of swine as
an alternate model applicable to cardiovascular
safety evaluation of human pharmaceuticals.
The presentation will focus primarily on
MPI Research’s experience in implementation
and validation of a cardiovascular telemetry
model in miniature swine.
A variety of disease/efficacy models in swine
have proliferated over the past several decades,
commensurate with increasing recognition
of the high degree of anatomical, physiological,
and pathophysiological comparability between
the pig and human species. Miniature swine
currently have a widening use not only in
basic research, but also in some aspects
of safety assessment such as dermal and general
toxicology testing. Nevertheless, this species
currently is not a standard species in routine,
regulatory safety pharmacology evaluations.
The cardiopulmonary system of swine is quite
comparable to that of the human in terms
of both structure and function. Consequently,
various breeds of miniature swine are increasingly
used as a large animal toxicology species,
both of which explain the growing industry
interest in this species for safety pharmacology
testing. In 2001, a multinational pharmaceutical
industry survey indicated that most laboratories
routinely utilized the (beagle) dog and (cynomolgus)
monkey for electrocardiographic safety evaluation,
rather than swine. This routine use of beagles
and primates may change in the future with
increasing regulatory agency recognition
of the suitability of swine in such research.
Dr. James Laveglia, Executive Vice President
and Director of Research at MPI Research
remarked, ”In recognition of the validity
and reliability of swine as an emerging animal
safety model, regulatory agencies such as
ICH and FDA have recently supported the use
of swine for multiple areas of drug safety
testing, including cardiovascular safety.
MPI Research has become a leader in the use
of swine for many drug and device testing
applications and we have recently expanded
our facility to accommodate up to 1000 of
this increasingly important preclinical species
at any given time.”
MPI Research exists to provide comprehensive
non-clinical research that meets the requirements
of pharmaceutical, medical device, animal
health and chemical companies as well as
governmental agencies as we partner together
to bring safer, healthier products to the
world. MPI Research employees specialize
in a wide variety of scientific disciplines
including toxicology, pharmacology, metabolism,
pathology, clinical pathology, reproductive
and developmental biology, veterinary science,
neuroscience, experimental therapeutics,
immunotoxicology, analytical chemistry, computer
science, regulatory science, and statistics.
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