16c. Humane endpoints
What to write
Describe the humane endpoints established for the study, the signs that were monitored, and the frequency of monitoring. If the study did not set humane endpoints, state this.
Explanation
Humane endpoints are predetermined morphological, physiological, and/or behavioural signs that define the circumstances under which an animal will be removed from an experimental study. The use of humane endpoints can help minimise harm while allowing the scientific objectives to be achieved1. Report the humane endpoints that were established for the specific study, species, and strain. Include clear criteria of the clinical signs monitored2 and clinical signs that led to euthanasia or other defined actions. Include details such as general welfare indicators (e.g., weight loss, reduced food intake, abnormal posture) and procedure-specific welfare indicators (e.g., tumour size in cancer studies3, sensory-motor deficits in stroke studies4).
Report the timing and frequency of monitoring, taking into consideration the normal circadian rhythm of the animal and timing of scientific procedures, as well as any increase in the frequency of monitoring (e.g., postsurgery recovery, critical times during disease studies, or following the observation of an adverse event). Publishing score sheets of the clinical signs that were monitored5 can help guide other researchers to develop clinically relevant welfare assessments, particularly for studies reporting novel procedures.
This information should be reported even if no animal reached any of the humane endpoints. If no humane endpoints were established for the study, explicitly state this.
Examples
‘Both the research team and the veterinary staff monitored animals twice daily. Health was monitored by weight (twice weekly), food and water intake, and general assessment of animal activity, panting, and fur condition…. The maximum size the tumors allowed to grow in the mice before euthanasia was 2000 mm3’6.
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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