Guest guest Posted September 29, 2000 Report Share Posted September 29, 2000 Beagle research protested Tumors injected into puppies' brains Michael Chow/The Arizona Republic Researcher Mike Berens By Kerry Fehr-Snyder The Arizona Republic Sept. 27, 2000 Animal-rights activists are demanding that a researcher at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix stop injecting tumors into the brains of beagle puppies, calling the practice outrageous and inhumane. And Arizona State University, which had housed the dogs up until a year ago, expressed serious concerns about the project, prompting researcher Mike Berens to move the animals elsewhere or face the prospect of having the university cancel its involvement. " This is outrageous animal cruelty, " said Elliot Katz, a veterinarian and founder of In Defense of Animals. " There has to be an endpoint to something like this. " The group is planning a demonstration today in front of the research center to bring attention to the plight of more than 100 beagles that have died in Berens' largely unsuccessful effort to create a model for how brain cancer grows in humans. Berens defended his work as necessary in the fight to find a cure for malignant gliomas, the most lethal form of brain cancer. " I'm protesting brain cancer, " he said. " I do that 10 to 12 hours every day. I think brain cancer should stop. " Activists believe Berens should find an alternative to using animals, especially beagles, in his research. " I'm most concerned about these dogs, " said Pat Haight, who has a master's degree in animal learning and behavior. " I just want the research stopped; research supported by taxes I pay and my husband pays. " The National Institutes of Health have awarded Berens about $600,000 over the past three years to support his K-9 Brain Tumor Research project. His research has the approval of both the national agency and Barrow Neurological Institute, a division of St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center. ASU also had signed off on the research. But that changed last year when the university's Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee became frustrated by the large number of puppies that died or had to be euthanized. " The survival rates were very low, " said Eddie Castañeda, chairman of the eight-member committee. The university also was concerned that it was not allowed to oversee surgeries on the animals, which had been kept in kennels at the ASU Research Park in south Tempe, until taken to Barrow for the experiments. Although ASU agreed to house the animals for eight years, the committee began to look more closely into Berens' work during the past three years. " There were a lot of discussions about the pace at which his research was progressing, " Casteñeda said. " It didn't seem like he was getting any closer to producing an animal that was a suitable model. " Berens, a cancer researcher for 24 years, patented a procedure whereby he injects gliomas, cancerous cells, while beagles are still in utero. His patented technique prevents the fetal puppies from rejecting the foreign body or being aborted. After the puppies are born, the tumors are removed from their skin and implanted into their heads by drilling a small hole into their brains. Berens said all 120 dogs that had the procedure died. " Boy, I would love to say yes, " he said, in answer to whether any have lived long enough to serve as a model to study the dreaded disease. " I have to think about the child or the grandmother or the mother with three children who have this, " he said. Berens, who owns a sheltie and considers himself a dog lover, said he understands why animal-rights activists are upset by his research. " But there has to be some short-term losers here, " he said. " It's part of the price we have to pay as a society. " Most cancer researchers use mice. But Berens said that, although a federal project using mice models for human cancer is showing promise, he doesn't believe mice are good substitutes for brain-cancer research because their brains are too small. Photos - 35mm Quality Prints, Now Get 15 Free! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.