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by alextheparrot
2037 days ago
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I’m only vaguely familiar with Weinstein’s claims, but you might find the following news article about some research I remembered going to a talk to about 5 years ago [0]. There’s a lot of proposals in the stem cell community like this, though I lack the insight to vet whether that’s happening in practice. > About 80 percent of experimental drugs fail in human clinical trials because they are unsafe or ineffective, with some 30 percent found to be toxic in people despite promising results in animal studies Effectively, a huge percent of drugs are failing out in clinical trials — so a few false negatives where the phenotypes aren’t measured correctly or are on an incompatible time scale seems pretty expected. I haven’t seen anyone showing that “fixing” lab mice would’ve resulted in different animal trial results — is Bret claiming this? [0] https://madison.com/wsj/news/local/health_med_fit/tissue-chi... |
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No one may have shown it, but it seems extremely unlikely to me that we are testing things in animals in the absolute optimum fashion to minimize failure in later human trials. It would be quite extraordinary if we happened to so luckily arrive at the ideal model organisms and procedures.
Presumably all the protocols we could use are not equally good, and good criticism of existing protocols towards improving their utility is important.