A preclinical animal study is a type of scientific research conducted prior to initiating clinical trials in humans. Its primary aim is to assess the safety, toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and often the preliminary efficacy of a proposed medical intervention.
While closely related, preclinical animal studies and experimental animal studies are not exactly the same. Below is a structured comparison:
Feature | Preclinical Animal Study | Experimental Animal Study |
---|---|---|
Definition | Subset of animal research aimed at clinical translation | Broad category of studies involving animals |
Primary Purpose | To evaluate safety, toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary efficacy before human trials | To explore biological mechanisms, disease models, or test hypotheses |
Regulatory Context | Required for regulatory submission (e.g., FDA IND) | Not necessarily linked to regulatory processes |
Goal | Support first-in-human trials | Generate scientific knowledge, may or may not be translational |
Typical Outputs | Data for dose selection, risk assessment, trial design | Mechanistic insights, disease modeling, biomarker discovery |
Examples | Testing new drug in mice before human trial | Studying gene expression changes in Alzheimerβs mice |
Field | Translational / applied research | Basic or applied research |
Scope | Narrower: focused on clinical applicability | Broader: includes all types of animal experimentation |
Summary:
Tags: preclinical, experimental, animal studies, translational research, basic science, IND