Proposed multidimensional pain outcome methodology to demonstrate analgesic drug efficacy and facilitate future drug approval for piglet castration.


Journal

Animal health research reviews
ISSN: 1475-2654
Titre abrégé: Anim Health Res Rev
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101083072

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
12 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 4 12 2021
medline: 6 5 2022
entrez: 3 12 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Castration of male piglets in the United States is conducted without analgesics because no Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved products are labeled for pain control in swine. The absence of approved products is primarily due to a wide variation in how pain is measured in suckling piglets and the lack of validated pain-specific outcomes individually indistinct from other biological responses, such as general stress or inflammation responses with cortisol. Simply put, to measure pain mitigation, measurement of pain must be specific, quantifiable, and defined. Therefore, given the need for mitigating castration pain, a consortium of researchers, veterinarians, industry, and regulatory agencies was formed to identify potential animal-based outcomes and develop a methodology, based on the known scientific research, to measure pain and the efficacy of mitigation strategies. The outcome-based measures included physiological, neuroendocrine, behavioral, and production parameters. Ultimately, this consortium aims to provide a validated multimodal methodology to demonstrate analgesic drug efficacy for piglet castration.Measurable outcomes were selected based on published studies suggesting their validity, reliability, and sensitivity for the direct or indirect measurement of pain associated with surgical castration in piglets. Outcomes to be considered are observation of pain behaviors (i.e. ethogram defined behaviors and piglet grimace scale), gait parameters measured with a pressure mat, infrared thermography of skin temperature of the cranium and periphery of the eye, and blood biomarkers. Other measures include body weight and mortality rate.This standardized measurement of the outcome variable's primary goal is to facilitate consistency and rigor by developing a research methodology utilizing endpoints that are well-defined and reliably measure pain in piglets. The resulting methodology will facilitate and guide the evaluation of the effectiveness of comprehensive analgesic interventions for 3- to 5-day-old piglets following surgical castration.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34859764
doi: 10.1017/S1466252321000141
pii: S1466252321000141
doi:

Substances chimiques

Analgesics 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

163-176

Auteurs

Angela Baysinger (A)

Merck Animal Health, 35500 W 91st Street, DeSoto, Kansas66018, USA.

Sherrie R Webb (SR)

American Association of Swine Veterinarians, 830 26th Street, Perry, Iowa50220, USA.

Jennifer Brown (J)

Prairie Swine Centre, 2105 8th Street East, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7H 5N9, Canada.

Johann F Coetzee (JF)

Department of Anatomy and Physiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Coles Hall, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas66506, USA.

Sara Crawford (S)

National Pork Board, 1776 NW 114th Street, Clive, Iowa50325, USA.

Ashley DeDecker (A)

Smithfield, 4134 US 117, Rose Hill, North Carolina28458, USA.

Locke A Karriker (LA)

Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa50011, USA.

Monique Pairis-Garcia (M)

North Carolina State University, College of Veterinary Medicine, 1060 William Moore Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina27607, USA.

Mhairi A Sutherland (MA)

Beef + Lamb New Zealand, 154 Featherston St., Wellington, New Zealand.

Abbie V Viscardi (AV)

Department of Anatomy and Physiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Coles Hall, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas66506, USA.

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Classifications MeSH