期刊
FRONTIERS IN BIOENGINEERING AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -出版社
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.673683
关键词
myocardial infarction; heart failure; large animal models; large animal surgery; preclinical; translational research; review
资金
- Stanford Cardiovascular Institute (CVI) 2020 Seed Grant from Staford CVI
- Gootter Foundation
Establishing an appropriate disease model, frequent modifications to surgical procedures, and insufficient transparency in reporting are three major inhibitors in current preclinical myocardial infarction research.
Establishing an appropriate disease model that mimics the complexities of human cardiovascular disease is critical for evaluating the clinical efficacy and translation success. The multifaceted and complex nature of human ischemic heart disease is difficult to recapitulate in animal models. This difficulty is often compounded by the methodological biases introduced in animal studies. Considerable variations across animal species, modifications made in surgical procedures, and inadequate randomization, sample size calculation, blinding, and heterogeneity of animal models used often produce preclinical cardiovascular research that looks promising but is irreproducible and not translatable. Moreover, many published papers are not transparent enough for other investigators to verify the feasibility of the studies and the therapeutics' efficacy. Unfortunately, successful translation of these innovative therapies in such a closed and biased research is difficult. This review discusses some challenges in current preclinical myocardial infarction research, focusing on the following three major inhibitors for its successful translation: Inappropriate disease model, frequent modifications to surgical procedures, and insufficient reporting transparency.
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