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Animal Testing
In animal testing, drug companies make every effort to use as few animals as possible and to ensure their humane
and proper care. Generally, two or more species (one rodent, one non-rodent) are tested because a drug may affect one
species differently from another. Animal testing is used to measure how much of a drug is absorbed into the blood, how
it is broken down chemically in the body, the toxicity of the drug and its breakdown products (metabolites), and how
quickly the drug and its metabolites are excreted from the body.
Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Handbook.
Back to The New Drug Development Process
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