Meeting Report

Author:

Sasseville V. G.1,Mansfield K. G.1,Mankowski J. L.2,Tremblay C.3,Terio K. A.4,Mätz-Rensing K.5,Gruber-Dujardin E.5,Delaney M. A.4,Schmidt L. D.6,Liu D.7,Markovits J. E.1,Owston M.8,Harbison C.9,Shanmukhappa S.9,Miller A. D.9,Kaliyaperumal S.9,Assaf B. T.9,Kattenhorn L.9,Macri S. Cummings9,Simmons H. A.10,Baldessari A.11,Sharma P.12,Courtney C.12,Bradley A.13,Cline J. M.6,Reindel J. F.14,Hutto D. L.15,Montali R. J.2,Lowenstine L. J.16

Affiliation:

1. Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts

2. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

3. Charles River Laboratories, Quebec, Canada

4. University of Illinois, Zoological Pathology Program, Maywood, Illinois

5. German Primate Center, Göttingen, Germany

6. Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

7. Tulane University, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Covington, Louisiana

8. Texas Biomedical Research Institute, Southwest National Primate Research Center, San Antonio, Texas

9. Harvard Medical School, New England Primate Research Center, Southborough, Massachusetts

10. University of Wisconsin, Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, Madison, Wisconsin

11. University of Washington, Washington National Primate Research Center, Seattle, Washington, DC

12. Emory University, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Atlanta, Georgia

13. Charles River Laboratories, Edinburgh, UK

14. Amgen, Inc. Seattle, Washington, DC

15. Eisai, Inc., Andover, Massachusetts

16. University of California, Davis, California For supplemental files, see http://www.scanscope.com/ACVP%20Slide%20Seminars/2011/Primate%20Pathology/view.apml

Abstract

The combination of loss of habitat, human population encroachment, and increased demand of select nonhuman primates for biomedical research has significantly affected populations. There remains a need for knowledge and expertise in understanding background findings as related to the age, source, strain, and disease status of nonhuman primates. In particular, for safety/biomedical studies, a broader understanding and documentation of lesions would help clarify background from drug-related findings. A workshop and a minisymposium on spontaneous lesions and diseases in nonhuman primates were sponsored by the concurrent Annual Meetings of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and the American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology held December 3–4, 2011, in Nashville, Tennessee. The first session had presentations from Drs Lowenstine and Montali, pathologists with extensive experience in wild and zoo populations of nonhuman primates, which was followed by presentations of 20 unique case reports of rare or newly observed spontaneous lesions in nonhuman primates (see online files for access to digital whole-slide images corresponding to each case report at http://www.scanscope.com/ACVP%20Slide%20Seminars/2011/Primate%20Pathology/view.apml). The minisymposium was composed of 5 nonhuman-primate researchers (Drs Bradley, Cline, Sasseville, Miller, Hutto) who concentrated on background and spontaneous lesions in nonhuman primates used in drug safety studies. Cynomolgus and rhesus macaques were emphasized, with some material presented on common marmosets. Congenital, acquired, inflammatory, and neoplastic changes were highlighed with a focus on clinical, macroscopic, and histopathologic findings that could confound the interpretation of drug safety studies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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