What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?

Within preclinical research, attention has focused on experimental design and how current practices can lead to poor reproducibility. There are numerous decision points when designing experiments. Ethically, when working with animals we need to conduct a harm–benefit analysis to ensure the animal us...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Natasha A Karp, Derek Fry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:BMJ Open Science
Online Access:https://openscience.bmj.com/content/5/1/e100126.full
id doaj-4ea2d7c165634116a7cb7c4b477cdc1b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4ea2d7c165634116a7cb7c4b477cdc1b2021-07-28T16:00:10ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Science2398-87032021-07-015110.1136/bmjos-2020-100126What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?Natasha A Karp0Derek Fry1Data Sciences and Quantitative Biology, Discovery Sciences, R&D, AstraZeneca R&D Cambridge, Cambridge, UKThe University of Manchester, Manchester, UKWithin preclinical research, attention has focused on experimental design and how current practices can lead to poor reproducibility. There are numerous decision points when designing experiments. Ethically, when working with animals we need to conduct a harm–benefit analysis to ensure the animal use is justified for the scientific gain. Experiments should be robust, not use more or fewer animals than necessary, and truly add to the knowledge base of science. Using case studies to explore these decision points, we consider how individual experiments can be designed in several different ways. We use the Experimental Design Assistant (EDA) graphical summary of each experiment to visualise the design differences and then consider the strengths and weaknesses of each design. Through this format, we explore key and topical experimental design issues such as pseudo-replication, blocking, covariates, sex bias, inference space, standardisation fallacy and factorial designs. There are numerous articles discussing these critical issues in the literature, but here we bring together these topics and explore them using real-world examples allowing the implications of the choice of design to be considered. Fundamentally, there is no perfect experiment; choices must be made which will have an impact on the conclusions that can be drawn. We need to understand the limitations of an experiment’s design and when we report the experiments, we need to share the caveats that inherently exist.https://openscience.bmj.com/content/5/1/e100126.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natasha A Karp
Derek Fry
spellingShingle Natasha A Karp
Derek Fry
What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
BMJ Open Science
author_facet Natasha A Karp
Derek Fry
author_sort Natasha A Karp
title What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
title_short What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
title_full What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
title_fullStr What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
title_full_unstemmed What is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
title_sort what is the optimum design for my animal experiment?
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Science
issn 2398-8703
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Within preclinical research, attention has focused on experimental design and how current practices can lead to poor reproducibility. There are numerous decision points when designing experiments. Ethically, when working with animals we need to conduct a harm–benefit analysis to ensure the animal use is justified for the scientific gain. Experiments should be robust, not use more or fewer animals than necessary, and truly add to the knowledge base of science. Using case studies to explore these decision points, we consider how individual experiments can be designed in several different ways. We use the Experimental Design Assistant (EDA) graphical summary of each experiment to visualise the design differences and then consider the strengths and weaknesses of each design. Through this format, we explore key and topical experimental design issues such as pseudo-replication, blocking, covariates, sex bias, inference space, standardisation fallacy and factorial designs. There are numerous articles discussing these critical issues in the literature, but here we bring together these topics and explore them using real-world examples allowing the implications of the choice of design to be considered. Fundamentally, there is no perfect experiment; choices must be made which will have an impact on the conclusions that can be drawn. We need to understand the limitations of an experiment’s design and when we report the experiments, we need to share the caveats that inherently exist.
url https://openscience.bmj.com/content/5/1/e100126.full
work_keys_str_mv AT natashaakarp whatistheoptimumdesignformyanimalexperiment
AT derekfry whatistheoptimumdesignformyanimalexperiment
_version_ 1721268058156171264