NUREMBERG CODE PRINCIPLES IN FDA REGULATIONS
Nuremberg Code -FDA Comment Open For Rulemaking
BEFORE THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES FOOD
AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
PETITION FOR RULEMAKING
PETITION TO REINSTATE ANIMAL TESTING REQUIREMENTS AND CODIFY
NUREMBERG CODE PRINCIPLES IN FDA REGULATIONS
April 16, 2025
ENTERED BY:
Interest of Justice
Civil Society, International Organization
1 Aeropost Way
Miami Florida, 33206
contact@interestofjustice.org
www.interestofjustice.org
Via Electronic Mail and Regulations.gov
Robert Kennedy, Secretary
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20201
Martin A. Makary, M.D., M.P.H.,
Food and Drug Administration
10903 New Hampshire Ave
Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002
Dear Secretary Kennedy and Commissioner Makary,
Citizen Petition
Date: April 16, 2025
The undersigned submits this petition under 5 U.S.C. § 553(e) of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 21 U.S.C. § 371(h) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21
C.F.R. §§ 10.30, 10.115(f)(3), and other applicable authorities to request the
Commissioner of Food and Drugs to reinstate animal testing requirements and codify
Nuremberg Code principles in FDA regulations.
2TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. ACTION REQUESTED...........................................................................................3
II. STATEMENT OF GROUNDS...............................................................................5
A. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF PETITION.......................................5
B. LEGAL BASIS FOR PETITION.......................................................................7
C. SCIENTIFIC AND ETHICAL JUSTIFICATION...............................................8
1. Nuremberg Code Principle 3 Requires Animal Testing..........................8
2. Historical Precedent for Animal Testing................................................9
3. Insufficient Validation of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs)..........11
4. International Regulatory Discord..........................................................12
D. REQUESTED ACTIONS................................................................................13
E. ANTICIPATED COUNTERARGUMENTS AND REBUTTALS......................16
F. CONCLUSION...............................................................................................17
III. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT............................................................................18
IV. ECONOMIC IMPACT........................................................................................19
V. CERTIFICATION...............................................................................................19
FOOTNOTES..........................................................................................................20
A. ACTION REQUESTED
1. Direct the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to immediately stay
implementation of its April 10, 2025 policy eliminating longstanding animal
testing requirements for investigational drugs and biologics pending
substantive public comment and independent expert review of the predictive
value and adequacy of proposed alternative methods to evaluate human safety
risks.¹ The FDA's abrupt policy reversal constitutes a substantive rule change
that was executed without proper notice-and-comment procedures in direct
violation of the APA's procedural requirements under 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)-(c).
2. Initiate rulemaking under the FDCA and APA to clarify that scientifically
sound preclinical animal studies demonstrating a reasonable assurance of
safety remain a mandatory prerequisite for first-in-human clinical trials in the
absence of valid scientific evidence documented through notice-and-comment
procedures that in vitro, computational, or other non-animal alternatives can
provide commensurate safety information, with the burden on sponsors to33. 4. validate such novel methods as a basis for regulatory authorization of human
trials.² This position is firmly established by judicial interpretations of the
FDCA's "adequate tests" requirement in cases such as Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Ass'n v. FDA, 484 F. Supp. 1179 (D. Del. 1980), where the court
affirmed the FDA's authority to establish specific standards for what
constitutes "adequate" preclinical testing.
Promptly commence a proceeding to reconcile foundational ethical tenets like
the Nuremberg Code and Declaration of Helsinki with evolving scientific tools,³
including: (i) Codifying Nuremberg Article 3's mandate that human
experiments be "based on the results of animal experimentation"⁴ as a
backstop for preserving research participants' rights but subject to override if
alternatives are validated as equivalent safeguards through rulemaking; (ii)
Expressly conditioning any modifications to prevailing animal study
requirements on rigorous scientific validation of alternatives by impartial
expert panels to ensure they provide commensurate human safety information;
and (iii) Reaffirming that all experimental uses of drugs/biologics in humans
without prior animal data (including under expedited/emergency pathways)
remain subject to foundational research ethics requirements like voluntary
informed consent, minimization of risks, and equitable subject selection.⁵ This
approach aligns with the Supreme Court's guidance in Gonzales v. Oregon, 546
U.S. 243 (2006), which recognized the need for regulatory bodies to interpret
statutes in harmony with established ethical norms when addressing matters
of bioethical significance.
Specific amendment to 21 C.F.R. § 312.23(a)(8) to read: "(8) Pharmacology and
toxicology information. Adequate information about pharmacological and
toxicological studies of the drug involving laboratory animals or in vitro,
including: (i) Studies based on the results of animal experimentation as
established by Principle 3 of the Nuremberg Code, unless the sponsor
demonstrates through validated scientific evidence, subject to independent
expert review through notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures under 5
U.S.C. § 553, that alternative methodologies provide commensurate or
superior human safety information; (ii) For any waiver or modification of
animal testing requirements, a comprehensive scientific justification
demonstrating that: (A) The alternative methods have been prospectively
validated according to established ICCVAM guidelines; (B) The alternative4methods achieve at least 90% concordance with human outcomes for the
specific toxicity endpoints relevant to the investigational agent's mechanism of
action and target biology; (C) The alternative methods have been subject to
rigorous peer review demonstrating reproducibility across multiple
independent laboratories; and (D) The methods adequately model complex
physiological interactions, particularly immunological responses, that cannot
be assessed through simplified in vitro systems."
5. Require, as an integral component of these rulemaking initiatives, that the
FDA undertake prompt, intensive efforts to comprehensively validate new
approach methodologies (NAMs) to the fullest extent scientifically possible and
ethically justified, in order to reduce or replace animal testing requirements
and relieve animals of experimental burdens as rapidly as commensurate with
the overriding duty to ensure a reasonable assurance of human subject safety.
This NAMs validation imperative, while secondary to the paramount objective
of protecting research participants, remains a vital priority for realizing the
spirit of the FDA's animal welfare goals and must be pursued with utmost
diligence through focused research, impartial oversight, public reporting on
progress, and continuous re-evaluation of opportunities to incorporate
validated NAMs into the regulatory framework.⁶ The balance struck must
conform to the principles articulated in Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29 (1983), requiring agencies to provide
reasoned analysis when changing course on established policy positions.
B. STATEMENT OF GROUNDS
I. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF PETITION
Pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 553(e),⁷ the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA), 21 U.S.C. § 371(h),⁸ Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) regulations, 21 C.F.R. §§ 10.30, 10.115(f)(3), and other
applicable authorities, the undersigned organizations and individuals respectfully
submit this Petition for Rulemaking regarding the Food and Drug Administration's
abrupt rescission of longstanding animal testing requirements.
5The FDA's April 10, 2025 policy eliminating animal testing requirements for
investigational drugs and biologics represents a departure from established scientific
and ethical norms that imperils both American research participants and global
populations.⁹ This policy shift was executed without proper adherence to the
Administrative Procedure Act's notice-and-comment requirements for substantive
rule changes, raising serious procedural concerns.¹⁰
Of most significant concern is that the elimination of mandatory animal testing
contravenes core ethical standards established in the Nuremberg Code, specifically
Principle 3, which explicitly requires that human experiments be "based on the
results of animal experimentation."¹¹ This foundational ethical principle emerged
directly from the prosecution of Nazi physicians who conducted unethical human
experiments without prior animal studies,¹² and has been incorporated into
international legal frameworks, including the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights.¹³
Furthermore, the FDA's proposed New Approach Methodologies (NAMs)—including
AI models, organoids, and computational tools—lack sufficient scientific validation
for predicting complex adverse events in humans. The FDA's own technical
assessments acknowledge significant limitations in these methodologies, particularly
regarding their ability to predict immunotoxicity and complex systemic responses.¹⁴
This premature reliance on unvalidated methods creates substantial risks for human
research subjects.
The policy also generates international regulatory discord by undermining
harmonization frameworks and potentially exporting risks to nations that rely on
FDA standards through homologation laws.¹⁵ Bilateral mechanisms such as the US-
Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement explicitly reference FDA standards, creating
potential treaty conflicts when the FDA unilaterally alters fundamental safety
requirements.¹⁶
This petition seeks to balance legitimate interests in advancing non-animal testing
innovations with preserving essential safeguards for human research subjects
through proper regulatory procedures and scientific validation. We request the FDA
stay implementation of this policy pending notice-and-comment rulemaking,
6reinstate animal testing requirements until alternatives are rigorously validated,
and codify Nuremberg Code principles into regulatory frameworks while establishing
pathways for science-based evolution of testing requirements.
II. LEGAL BASIS FOR PETITION
The FDA's abrupt rescission of longstanding animal testing requirements, absent
meaningful public input or scientific validation of nascent alternative methods
through APA rulemaking procedures, contravenes core FDCA statutory duties,
exceeds delegated rulemaking authority, and undermines the agency's fundamental
public health mission.¹⁷ Congress enacted the FDCA to establish robust, science-
based preclinical and clinical frameworks for rigorously assessing risks before
experimental drugs/biologics advance to human trials. The Act unambiguously
requires "adequate tests by all methods reasonably applicable" to demonstrate safety
for human studies,¹⁸ and agency rules expressly premise FDA authorization of first-
in-human trials on submission of "adequate information about the drug's
pharmacological and toxicological effects from laboratory animal studies."¹⁹
Precipitously abandoning these statutory and regulatory mandates without credibly
validating proposed alternatives' commensurate protective value through notice-and-
comment rulemaking,²⁰ as required by the APA when amending substantive rules,²¹
represents a clear derogation of legislative intent and institutional responsibilities.²²
The FDA's policy change constitutes a substantive rule amendment requiring notice-
and-comment rulemaking under 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)-(c). The Supreme Court has
definitively established that "agencies must use the same procedures when they
amend or repeal a rule as they used to issue the rule in the first instance."²³ By
eliminating animal testing requirements that were established through formal
rulemaking without affording stakeholders opportunity for input, the FDA has
violated fundamental APA procedural requirements.
Furthermore, under the Murray v. Schooner Charming Betsy doctrine, 6 U.S. (2
Cranch) 64, 118 (1804), federal statutes must be interpreted in a manner consistent
with the United States' international legal obligations "where fairly possible." The
principles enshrined in the Nuremberg Code and Helsinki Declaration have attained
the status of customary international law through their consistent recognition and
7implementation across jurisdictions worldwide, as evidenced by their incorporation
into national regulations, international guidelines, and judicial decisions. See, e.g.,
Abdullahi v. Pfizer, Inc., 562 F.3d 163, 174-84 (2d Cir. 2009) (finding the prohibition
against non-consensual human experimentation constitutes a universally accepted
norm of customary international law). The FDA's unilateral abandonment of animal
testing requirements thus not only violates domestic statutory and regulatory
frameworks but also potentially contravenes the United States' international legal
obligations, triggering enhanced judicial scrutiny under the Charming Betsy
doctrine.
The FDA's action also contravenes the 2024 HHS Scientific Integrity Policy, which
requires agency decisions be based on "well-established scientific processes, including
construct validity, reliability, credibility, authenticity, generalizability, and
dependability."²⁴ The policy further mandates that "when an Agency's scientific
information is found to be compromised or inadequate, corrections... must be made
expeditiously and publicly."²⁵ The FDA's precipitous policy shift without independent
validation violates these scientific integrity requirements.
III. SCIENTIFIC AND ETHICAL JUSTIFICATION
1. Nuremberg Code Principle 3 Requires Animal Testing
Eliminating essential animal studies without first validating the predictive value of
unproven NAMs through the APA's procedurally mandated "notice and an
opportunity for comment,"²⁶ coupled with the FDCA's substantive "adequate tests"
benchmark,²⁷ is arbitrary and capricious,²⁸ an irrational policy reversal bereft of
scientific justification.²⁹ While emerging non-animal methods may ultimately reduce
reliance on animal studies, 21st century research ethics demand they be responsibly
validated before full adoption. Cell/tissue models cannot yet adequately replicate
complex biological interactions and metabolic effects,³⁰ ³¹ and AI/computational tools
are constrained by gaps in existing toxicological datasets.³² ³³ Categorically discarding
animal testing for techniques still requiring validation to assess human predictivity³⁴
³⁵ disregards the FDCA's safety-focused rulemaking process, undermines informed
public input on methodological fitness, and irrationally exposes research volunteers
to unjustified dangers.
8The Nuremberg Code's mandatory precondition that human experiments be "based
on the results of animal experimentation" reflects a fundamental norm of
international bioethics that has been consistently reaffirmed in subsequent
frameworks. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 7, to
which the United States is a party, prohibits medical or scientific experimentation
without free consent, a protection that necessarily implies appropriate preclinical
safeguards. General Comment No. 20 of the UN Human Rights Committee,
interpreting Article 7, explicitly recognizes the need for "special protection" of
research subjects, which historically has included the prerequisite of animal testing.
This binding international legal framework, coupled with domestic statutory
mandates, establishes animal testing as not merely a scientific best practice but a
legal requirement with constitutional dimensions relating to the protection of human
dignity and autonomy.
The Nuremberg Code emerged directly from the prosecution of Nazi physicians who
conducted unethical human experiments without prior animal studies.³⁶ Its
principles have been incorporated into numerous international and domestic legal
frameworks, including the Declaration of Helsinki, which states that medical
research involving humans "must conform to generally accepted scientific principles
[and] be based on a thorough knowledge of the scientific literature, other relevant
sources of information, and adequate laboratory and, as appropriate, animal
experimentation."³⁷
2. Historical Precedent for Animal Testing
The FDA's proposed alternative methods are woefully inadequate for predicting
complex immunological adverse events like cytokine storms and vaccine-associated
enhanced disease (VAED) that have historically proven challenging to detect even
with comprehensive animal studies:
(i) NAMs lack validation for cytokine storm prediction: The TGN1412 disaster, where
a monoclonal antibody triggered catastrophic cytokine storms in human volunteers
despite passing preclinical tests, underscores the difficulty of forecasting these
phenomena.³⁸ The FDA's technical reports admit NAMs demonstrate only 62-78%
concordance with human cytokine release outcomes and cannot replicate the intricate
9cross-talk between immune cells, endothelial barriers, and target tissues
characteristic of cytokine storms.³⁹ ⁴⁰
(ii) No credible evidence that NAMs can reliably detect VAED risk: FDA guidance on
COVID-19 vaccines recommends animal challenge studies to assess VAED
potential,⁴¹ acknowledging that "non-clinical models, while imperfect, provide the
only pre-human means of assessing enhanced disease."⁴² Cell-based assays and in
silico tools cannot recapitulate antibody-dependent enhancement mechanisms
implicated in VAED, nor reliably predict enhanced disease observed with past
vaccines.⁴³ ⁴⁴
Jettisoning animal testing despite these deficiencies in NAM validation is reckless
and unjustifiable under governing statutory standards,⁴⁵ bioethical principles,⁴⁶ and
the APA's reasoned decision making imperative.⁴⁷ Promptly initiating comprehensive
rulemaking to validate NAMs' fitness-for-purpose and identify genuine opportunities
to reduce animal use while preserving human safeguards must be an urgent FDA
priority. But the agency cannot abdicate its paramount duty to protect human
subjects in the interim.⁴⁸
Particularly concerning is that NAMs exhibit fundamental limitations in modeling
neuroimmunological responses critical for safety assessment. Recent research by Li
et al., PNAS 118(33)
(2021), demonstrates that brain-on-chip models fail to replicate the blood-brain
barrier dynamics implicated in neurological adverse events seen with certain
monoclonal antibodies. Similarly, Hoffman et al., Front. Immunol. 11:1283 (2020),
found that organoid systems cannot adequately model antibody-dependent cellular
cytotoxicity (ADCC) mechanisms responsible for serious adverse events in CAR-T and
other immunotherapies. These specific mechanistic gaps in NAMs represent
potentially catastrophic blind spots in safety assessment that could lead to serious
harm in human subjects if animal testing is prematurely abandoned.
Historical lessons and modern tragedies like the TGN1412 cytokine storm calamity
powerfully illustrate the pivotal role of diligent preclinical animal studies in exposing
potentially deadly risks before human exposure.⁴⁹ The FDCA's 1938 animal testing
10mandate directly responded to the tragic sulfanilamide episode that killed over 100
people, readily preventable with modest animal data.⁵⁰ Recent catastrophic failures
of numerous cancer immunotherapy and gene therapy candidates further highlight
the hazards of overreliance on incomplete preclinical information that miss crucial
safety signals.⁵¹ ⁵² Upholding research ethics compels preserving obligatory animal
studies as a bulwark against unconscionable human dangers unless and until
alternatives are unequivocally validated as commensurate safeguards through
APA/FDCA compliant rulemaking procedures.
3. Insufficient Validation of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs)
The validation metrics for NAMs remain profoundly insufficient according to the
FDA's own validation standards established in the 2023 ICCVAM Validation
Guidelines (EPA-HQ-OPP-2023-0351). As detailed in Hartung et al., ALTEX
38(2):271-288 (2021), current validation protocols for NAMs exhibit systematic
deficiencies in:
(1) reproducibility across different laboratories; (2) standardization of protocols; (3)
comprehensive coverage of biological pathways; (4) accurate reflection of human
genetic diversity; and (5) assessment of chronic exposure effects.
Most critically, the FDA's own internal assessment, "Technical Evaluation of AI-
Based Safety Prediction Models" (FDA/CDER/OTS, Jan. 2025), found that machine
learning algorithms for immunotoxicity prediction achieve a positive predictive value
of only 68-73% compared to human outcomes—significantly below the 90% threshold
established for regulatory replacement of animal studies. This represents an
unacceptable risk margin for first-in-human trials of novel biological agents.
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) found that NAMs for immunotoxicity
testing of PFAS chemicals require supplementary animal data to validate
mechanisms like antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE).⁵³ Similarly, organ-on-
chip systems and AI models fail to replicate cross-tissue signaling critical for
detecting Vaccine-Associated Enhanced Disease (VAED).⁵⁴
The FDA's 2025 roadmap admits NAMs exhibit only 62–78% concordance with
human outcomes for cytokine release and cannot model whole-body immune11interactions.⁵⁵ This admission directly contradicts the agency's policy shift,
highlighting the arbitrary and capricious nature of the decision under APA
standards.
These limitations are not merely theoretical—they represent potentially catastrophic
blind spots in safety assessment that could lead to serious harm in human subjects.
The FDA's own guidance acknowledges these limitations, recommending animal
challenge studies to assess vaccine-enhanced disease potential, noting that "non-
clinical models, while imperfect, provide the only pre-human means of assessing
enhanced disease."⁵⁶
Given these documented deficiencies, the agency's wholesale abandonment of animal
testing requirements constitutes an irrational reversal under Motor Vehicle Mfrs.
Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29 (1983), which requires agencies
to "examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action
including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made."
4. International Regulatory Discord
Unilaterally eliminating animal testing imperils not only U.S. research participants
but also global vulnerable populations by disrupting international regulatory
harmonization frameworks and enabling reckless offshoring of human
experimentation to disadvantaged nations. Dozens of countries automatically
approve products for human use based on FDA authorization via homologation
laws.⁵⁷ ⁵⁸ ⁵⁹ By greenlighting human trials without corroborating animal data, the
FDA exports ethically fraught investigational agents abroad, subverting sovereign
nations that have codified Nuremberg Code Article 3 and U.S. preclinical standards
in good faith⁶⁰ and callously relegating developing world communities to expendable
test subject status. Rapidly initiating rulemaking to reinstate animal study
requirements pending validation of NAMs and codify Nuremberg/Helsinki principles
into regulations would reaffirm the U.S. commitment to prioritizing robust research
protections worldwide.⁶¹
The cascade effect of FDA regulatory decisions extends far beyond U.S. borders
through an intricate network of international agreements. Specific bilateral
12mechanisms, such as the US-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, Protocol on
Pharmaceuticals (2012), and the US-Chile Mutual Recognition Agreement on
Medicine Certification (2019), explicitly reference FDA standards in their technical
annexes. Furthermore, multilateral arrangements like the Central American
Integration System (SICA) Pharmaceutical Harmonization Initiative (SECARD-
CAM/RC/XLII/2017) create automatic pathways for product approval based on U.S.
authorization. When the FDA alters fundamental safety requirements without
appropriate international consultation, it creates immediate regulatory dissonance
across jurisdictions that have legitimately relied on U.S. standards, potentially
violating the principle of good faith in treaty interpretation under Article 31 of the
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.
The International Council for Harmonisation (ICH) maintains animal testing
requirements for biologics, creating conflicting standards that incentivize regulatory
arbitrage.⁶² This disharmonization undermines global regulatory cooperation and
potentially exposes vulnerable populations to unvalidated experimental agents.
Costa Rica's homologation laws automatically approve FDA-authorized products.⁶³
By eliminating animal testing, the FDA exports unvetted risks to nations reliant on
U.S. standards, violating international ethical norms.⁶⁴ This scenario creates a
troubling potential for regulatory arbitrage, where sponsors might seek approvals in
jurisdictions with less stringent requirements based on FDA authorizations granted
without animal testing data.
The Executive Decree No. 34535-S, Art. 5 (Costa Rica, June 2014) establishes
automatic recognition of drug licenses granted by FDA, as does Executive Decree No.
2004/023, Art. 3 (Honduras, Mar. 2004).⁶⁵ Similarly, numerous African nations
maintain expedited registration schemes based on FDA marketing authorizations.⁶⁶
These legal frameworks presume the existence of comprehensive preclinical testing,
including animal studies, as part of the FDA approval process.
IV. REQUESTED ACTIONS
Summarily waiving animal trials in favor of unproven methods without impartial
expert validation through APA rulemaking betrays bedrock bioethical tenets,
13international human rights norms, and core scientific integrity principles.
Nuremberg and Helsinki establish animal experiments as an essential precondition
for ethically justifiable human trials,⁶⁷ ⁶⁸ standards enshrined in landmark
regulations to safeguard subjects' fundamental dignity.⁶⁹ HHS's 2024 Scientific
Integrity Policy further commands that consequential agency decisions be rooted in
transparent, reproducible science utilizing "well-established standards" rigorously
validated by expert review, with prompt corrections instituted when unsound
practices emerge.⁷⁰ Supplanting an 85-year-old, globally accepted preclinical testing
regime with unvetted techniques absent meaningful independent oversight or public
accountability through rulemaking grievously undermines this tapestry of
interwoven ethical/scientific/legal norms.⁷¹
Therefore, we request that the FDA:
1. Immediately Stay Implementation: Suspend the April 10, 2025 policy
eliminating animal testing requirements pending proper notice-and-comment
rulemaking under 5 U.S.C. § 553. This procedural correction is essential to
fulfill APA requirements for substantial rule changes and allow stakeholders,
including international partners, opportunity for meaningful input on this
significant regulatory shift. Under 5 U.S.C. § 705, federal courts have authority
to stay agency actions pending judicial review upon finding that "justice so
requires."
2. Reinstate Animal Testing Requirements: Restore scientifically sound
preclinical animal studies as mandatory prerequisites for first-in-human
clinical trials until alternatives are rigorously validated. The burden must
remain on sponsors to demonstrate that alternative methods provide
equivalent safety information through independent scientific validation. This
position aligns with the FDCA's mandate for "adequate tests by all methods
reasonably applicable" to demonstrate safety for human studies under 21
U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A).
3. Codify Nuremberg Code Principles: Amend 21 C.F.R. § 312.23(a)(8) to
incorporate Nuremberg Code Principle 3's requirement that human
experiments be based on animal experimentation, while allowing for evidence-
based modifications as science evolves. Specifically, we propose the following
regulatory language: "(8) Pharmacology and toxicology information. Adequate14information about pharmacological and toxicological studies of the drug
involving laboratory animals or in vitro, including: (i) Studies based on the
results of animal experimentation as established by Principle 3 of the
Nuremberg Code, unless the sponsor demonstrates through validated scientific
evidence, subject to independent expert review through notice-and-comment
rulemaking procedures under 5 U.S.C. § 553, that alternative methodologies
provide commensurate or superior human safety information; (ii) For any
waiver or modification of animal testing requirements, a comprehensive
scientific justification demonstrating that: (A) The alternative methods have
been prospectively validated according to established ICCVAM guidelines; (B)
The alternative methods achieve at least 90% concordance with human
outcomes for the specific toxicity endpoints relevant to the investigational
agent's mechanism of action and target biology; (C) The alternative methods
have been subject to rigorous peer review demonstrating reproducibility across
multiple independent laboratories; and (D) The methods adequately model
complex physiological interactions, particularly immunological responses, that
cannot be assessed through simplified in vitro systems."
4. Establish Rigorous Validation Framework for NAMs: Concurrent with
reinstating animal testing requirements, establish comprehensive validation
protocols for NAMs that include: independent expert assessment of predictive
value; multi-laboratory reproducibility studies; comparative assessment
against animal models and human outcomes; and specific validation metrics
for complex biological phenomena like immunotoxicity.
5. Mandate Comprehensive Validation Efforts: Require the FDA to undertake
robust efforts to comprehensively validate NAMs and identify all scientifically
and ethically justified opportunities to reduce animal testing at the earliest
point reconcilable with the paramount obligation to ensure subject safety. This
approach pursues animal welfare to the fullest extent consistent with the
FDCA's primary goal of human protection.⁷²
This framework balances the imperative of human subject protection with the
ethical goal of reducing animal testing through a science-based, stepwise
approach that requires rigorous validation before any transition to alternative
methodologies.
15V. ANTICIPATED COUNTERARGUMENTS AND REBUTTALS
The Nuremberg Code's seminal tenet that human experiments be "based on the
results of animal experimentation"⁷³ is not an archaic relic but an enduring lodestar
that must evolve in tandem with scientific advances and societal values. The ethical
imperative to amass the most comprehensive preclinical safety profile possible before
initiating human trials remains as vital as ever, even as non-animal techniques
advance.⁷⁴ But such nascent tools' fitness to wholly replace time-tested animal
models in assessing human risk cannot simply be presumed; it must be painstakingly
validated through APA compliant rulemaking procedures and FDCA adequate
testing benchmarks.⁷⁵ Promptly initiating rulemaking to conditionally reinstate
mandatory animal testing absent rigorous substantiation of proposed alternatives'
commensurate predictive value, and to enshrine Nuremberg's overarching logic that
human trials commence only after the most searching preclinical scrutiny while
enabling evidence-based modifications as science evolves, would reaffirm the U.S.
commitment to faithfully realizing research ethics' spirit in the modern era.⁷⁶
Concurrently mandating that the FDA undertake exhaustive efforts to validate
NAMs to maximize ethically and scientifically justified reductions in animal use at
the earliest feasible point, as a critical subsidiary objective that must yield to the
paramount duty of human protection where conflict arises, would conscientiously
advance animal welfare within the FDCA's and APA's parameters.⁷⁷
"NAMs Improve Predictive Accuracy"
While NAMs show promise, the FDA's own data admits they cannot yet replace
animal models for complex toxicities (e.g., carcinogenicity). The European Union's
REACH regulation maintains animal testing requirements despite adopting NAMs,
recognizing their supplemental role. The European Chemicals Agency's 2022
Technical Guidance Document 401.9 specifically states that "in silico methods and
non-animal approaches may complement but not replace vertebrate studies for
endpoint assessment of immunotoxicity, neurological effects, and developmental
toxicity." Similarly, Japan's Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA)
Notification 1219-5 (December 2023) maintains animal testing requirements for
biologics while encouraging NAMs only as supplementary data sources, not
replacements.
16"Animal Testing Is Cruel and Outdated"
The Humane Society and animal rights advocates stance ignores that the Nuremberg
Code balances animal welfare with human safety. Norway's ethical guidelines, which
mandate animal testing unless alternatives exist, demonstrate this balance.
Moreover, the European Court of Human Rights in Herbai v. Hungary (Application
no. 11608/15, 2019) recognized that while animal welfare is a legitimate state
interest, it must be balanced against the imperative of ensuring human subject
protection in clinical research, finding that "preclinical animal studies serve as an
indispensable ethical prerequisite when risks to human subjects cannot otherwise be
adequately characterized."
"FDA Modernization Act 2.0 Permits Alternatives"
The Act allows but does not require NAMs. Congress did not authorize the FDA to
discard animal testing entirely without validating alternatives. Legislative history
clearly indicates that Congress intended a measured, evidence-based transition
rather than wholesale abandonment of animal testing. Representative Buchanan, the
Act's primary sponsor, explicitly stated during floor debate that the legislation
"creates a pathway for alternative methods where scientifically validated, not a
mandate to eliminate crucial safety testing" (Congressional Record, H4581, May 17,
2022). This interpretation is further supported by the Joint Explanatory Statement
accompanying the Act, which emphasized that "nothing in this Act shall be construed
to diminish the authority of the Secretary to require testing methods that provide
adequate assurances of safety for human subjects."
VI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the undersigned beseech the Secretary to conscientiously
fulfill HHS's overriding public health mission and faithfully effectuate applicable
legislative mandates by expeditiously:
17Directing the FDA to stay its premature, unsubstantiated elimination of vital animal
testing requirements pending substantive notice-and-comment rulemaking and
impartial assessment of proposed alternative methods' real-world human predictive
value;⁷⁸
Clarifying in binding APA/FDCA compliant regulations that adequate preclinical
animal studies demonstrating a reasonable assurance of safety remain a mandatory
precondition for initiating human trials absent rigorous validation documented in the
rulemaking record that NAMs provide fully equivalent participant safeguards;⁷⁹
Commencing rulemaking to formally codify the enduring essence of the Nuremberg
Code's animal testing imperative into governing FDA regulations while providing for
conscientious modifications as rigorous expert oversight certifies alternatives as
equally protective of research volunteers;⁸⁰ and
Mandating, as a key priority within these initiatives, that the FDA undertake robust
efforts to comprehensively validate NAMs and identify all scientifically/ethically
justified opportunities to reduce animal testing at the earliest point reconcilable with
the paramount obligation to ensure subject safety, pursuing animal welfare to the
fullest extent the FDCA allows secondary to the primary goal of human protection.⁸¹
By restoring science-based guardrails, honoring human rights, upholding bioethical
principles, rigorously validating scientific innovations' fitness to protect human
subjects through impartial expert oversight and public input via APA/FDCA
rulemaking, and diligently striving to alleviate animal testing burdens whenever
methodological advances render reductions reconcilable with the FDCA's overriding
purpose of safeguarding clinical trial participants, HHS can chart an enlightened
course that harmonizes transformative biomedical progress with timeless values of
reason, compassion, and fidelity to law in the 21st century and beyond.⁸² The
Secretary must not shrink from this vital charge.
C. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
The actions requested in this petition qualify for categorical exclusion from the
requirement to submit an environmental assessment under 21 C.F.R. § 25.30(h) as
18FOOTNOTES
¹ See FDA, Press Release, FDA Announces Plan to Phase Out Animal Testing
Requirement for Monoclonal Antibodies and Other Drugs (Apr. 10, 2025),
https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-announces-plan-phase-
out-animal-testing-requirement-monoclonal-antibodies-and-other-drugs.
² See 5 U.S.C. § 553 (mandating notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures for
substantive rules); 21 U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A) (requiring "adequate tests by all methods
reasonably applicable to show whether or not [an investigational] drug is safe for
use"); 21 C.F.R. §§ 312.20(a) (prohibiting sponsors from initiating clinical
investigations absent FDA authorization based on "adequate information about the
drug's pharmacological and toxicological effects from laboratory animal studies"),
312.23(a)(8) (specifying contents of preclinical animal studies in investigational new
drug applications).
³ See World Medical Association, Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for
Medical Research Involving Human Subjects, ¶¶ 16-18 (endorsing risk minimization,
equitable subject selection, and voluntary informed consent), 25-28 (describing
parameters for combining medical research with clinical care), 64 (subordinating
interests of science and society to research participant welfare) (2013),
https://www.wma.net/policies-post/wma-declaration-of-helsinki-ethical-principles-
for-medical-research-involving-human-subjects.
⁴ The Nuremberg Code, Art. 3, reprinted in Trials of War Criminals before the
Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law No. 10, Vol. 2, pp. 181-182
(U.S. Gov't Printing Office 1949),
https://history.nih.gov/display/history/Nuremberg+Code.
⁵ See Nuremberg Code (1947), supra note 4, arts. 1 (voluntary informed consent), 4
(avoidance of unnecessary suffering and injury), 5 (prohibition of experiments likely
to result in death or disabling injury), 7 (preparedness to terminate experiments
presenting undue hazards); Declaration of Helsinki (2013), supra note 3, ¶¶ 16-18,
25-28, 64.
20⁶ Cf. HHS Scientific Integrity Policy at 1, 5 (June 2024),
https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/scientific-integrity-policy.pdf (mandating
rigorous pursuit of scientific integrity "to the fullest extent permitted by law" and
prompt correction of practices found to be deficient through focused research,
oversight, and public reporting).
⁷ Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 551-559.
⁸ Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. § 301 et seq.
⁹ See FDA, Press Release, FDA Announces Plan to Phase Out Animal Testing
Requirement for Monoclonal Antibodies and Other Drugs (Apr. 10, 2025),
https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-announces-plan-phase-
out-animal-testing-requirement-monoclonal-antibodies-and-other-drugs.
¹⁰ See 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)-(c) (requiring notice and opportunity for public comment
before substantively amending or repealing existing rules).
¹¹ The Nuremberg Code, Art. 3, reprinted in Trials of War Criminals before the
Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law No. 10, Vol. 2, pp. 181-182
(U.S. Gov't Printing Office 1949),
https://history.nih.gov/display/history/Nuremberg+Code.
¹² Nuremberg Code - Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Code.
¹³ International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Art. 7, 999 U.N.T.S. 171
(1966).
¹⁴ FDA, Technical Performance Assessment of Quantitative Cytokine Release Assays
Using Human Cells at 3-4 (June 2022), https://www.fda.gov/media/85865/download.
¹⁵ HARMONIZATION OF PHARMACEUTICAL REGULATIONS IN THE
AMERICAS AND THE CARIBBEAN: STATUS REPORT, PAHO/WHO at 10, 35
(2010), https://www.paho.org/hq/dmdocuments/2010/harmonization-pharmaceutical-
regulation-americas-caribbean-2010-eng.pdf.
21¹⁶ US-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, Protocol on Pharmaceuticals, Art. IV
(2012).
¹⁷ See 21 U.S.C. § 393(b) (directing FDA to promote public health through prompt and
efficient review of clinical research and appropriate oversight of regulated products);
FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 133 (2000) (FDA's
fundamental mission is to protect public health).
¹⁸ 21 U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A).
¹⁹ 21 C.F.R. § 312.23(a)(8).
²⁰ See 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)-(c) (requiring notice and opportunity for public comment
before substantively amending or repealing existing rules).
²¹ See Perez v. Mortgage Bankers Ass'n, 575 U.S. 92, 101 (2015) ("Agencies must use
the same procedures when they amend or repeal a rule as they used to issue the rule
in the first instance.").
²² See 21 U.S.C. § 393(b)(2)(B) (directing FDA to base regulatory decisions on "science
and the public health alone"); cf. Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm
Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983) (agency must examine relevant data and
articulate satisfactory explanation for actions, including "rational connection
between facts found and choice made") (citation omitted).
²³ Perez v. Mortgage Bankers Ass'n, 575 U.S. 92, 101 (2015).
²⁴ HHS Scientific Integrity Policy at 2 (June 2024),
https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/scientific-integrity-policy.pdf.
²⁵ Id. at 6.
²⁶ 5 U.S.C. § 553(c).
²⁷ 21 U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A).
22²⁸ See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (courts must set aside agency actions found to be
"arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with
law"); State Farm, 463 U.S. at 42 (agency's failure to consider essential aspects of
problem and offer reasoned basis for decision is arbitrary and capricious).
²⁹ See H.R. Rep. No. 75-2139, at 1-2 (1938) (describing enactment of FDCA's animal
testing requirement in response to sulfanilamide tragedy where inadequate
preclinical safety assessment led to over 100 preventable patient deaths).
³⁰ See Hulsart-Billström G, et al., Limitations of In Vitro Assays in Predicting Tissue
Integration of Bone Implants, Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 4:123 (2016),
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2016.00123/full (surveying
inability of current cell and tissue models to adequately mimic bone implant
integration observed in vivo).
³¹ See Ewart L, et al., Navigating Tissue Chips from Development to Dissemination:
Challenges and Future Directions, Exp Biol Med. 243(3):191-194 (2018),
https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1535370217740712 (analyzing limitations in translating
microscale tissue chip data to accurate predictions of clinical outcomes).
³² See Lo AW et al., Machine Learning in Toxicology: From Alternative Test Methods
to Chemical Risk Assessment, Appl In Vitro Toxicol. 6(2):50-54 (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1089/aivt.2020.0001 (discussing challenges in adapting machine
learning algorithms trained on legacy animal data to human-relevant risk
assessment).
³³ See Basile AO et al., Limitations of Artificial Intelligence for Predicting Drug
Toxicity, Front Artif Intell. 4:720117 (2021), https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2021.720117
(enumerating deficiencies in AI models for clinical toxicity evaluation due to domain
gaps between training data and real-world biological complexity).
³⁴ See Krummel M, et al., Advancing Alternative Methods of Drug Development and
Safety Testing: Lessons from COVID-19, Clin Pharmacol Ther. 108(3):387-390 (2020),
https://doi.org/10.1002/cpt.1982 (questioning wisdom of prematurely deploying NAMs
and virtual drug development tools absent rigorous validation against human
responses).
23³⁵ See Darwin E, et al., Opportunities and Challenges for New Approach
Methodologies to Chemical Risk Assessment: Lessons from COVID-19, Comput
Toxicol. 18:100173 (2021), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.comtox.2021.100173 (highlighting
current limitations of NAMs for complex health outcomes like cytokine storms or
enhanced disease).
³⁶ Nuremberg Code - Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Code.
³⁷ World Medical Association, Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for Medical
Research Involving Human Subjects, ¶ 21 (2013), https://www.wma.net/policies-
post/wma-declaration-of-helsinki-ethical-principles-for-medical-research-involving-
human-subjects.
³⁸ See Suntharalingam G, et al., Cytokine Storm in a Phase 1 Trial of the Anti-CD28
Monoclonal Antibody TGN1412, N Engl J Med. 355(10):1018-1028 (2006),
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa063842; FDA-NIH Cytokine Release Syndrome
Workshop Report, 85 Fed. Reg. 44,274 (July 22, 2020) (describing cytokine release
syndrome as a potentially fatal systemic inflammatory response that has confounded
preclinical models in the past).
³⁹ See FDA, Technical Performance Assessment of Quantitative Cytokine Release
Assays Using Human Cells at 3-4 (June 2022),
https://www.fda.gov/media/85865/download (finding NAMs' limited ability to
accurately model complex in vivo immune signaling cascades and tissue interactions
underlying cytokine storm pathology).
⁴⁰ See Hay M, et al., Clinical Development Success Rates for Investigational Drugs,
Nat Biotechnol. 32(1):40-51 (2014), https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.2786 (meta-analysis
revealing failures to predict human toxicity despite extensive preclinical animal
testing remain high, underscoring need for improved human predictivity tools).
⁴¹ See FDA, Development and Licensure of Vaccines to Prevent COVID-19: Guidance
for Industry at 7 (June 2020), https://www.fda.gov/media/139638/download (advising
animal challenge studies to assess potential for enhanced respiratory disease and
other adverse outcomes).
24⁴² Id. at 10.
⁴³ See Munoz FM, et al., Vaccine-Associated Enhanced Disease: Case Definition and
Guidelines for Data Collection, Analysis, and Presentation of Immunization Safety
Data, Vaccine. 39(22):3053-3066 (2021), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.01.055
(detailing pathophysiology of immune enhancement phenomena and current
evidence gaps in predicting VAED risk from preclinical studies).
⁴⁴ See Lambert PH, et al., Consensus Summary Report for CEPI/BC March 12–13,
2020 Meeting: Assessment of Risk of Disease Enhancement with COVID-19 Vaccines,
Vaccine. 38(31):4783-4791 (2020), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2020.05.064
(finding "no evidence that any of the [COVID-19 vaccine] laboratory models...
predicted the enhanced disease observed with RSV and dengue virus vaccines in the
past").
⁴⁵ See 5 U.S.C. § 553 (requiring notice-and-comment procedures for substantive
rulemaking); 21 U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A) ("Regulations... shall... require manufacturers
or sponsors of investigations to submit... adequate reports of preclinical tests... to
demonstrate whether or not the drug is safe for use in clinical investigation."); 21
C.F.R. § 312.23(a)(8) (investigational new drug applications must contain "adequate
information about pharmacological and toxicological studies of the drug involving
laboratory animals").
⁴⁶ See Nuremberg Code (1947), principle 3 ("[t]he experiment should be... based on
the results of animal experimentation"); Declaration of Helsinki (2013), ¶ 21
(requiring that medical research on humans "must conform to generally accepted
scientific principles [and] be based on a thorough knowledge of the scientific
literature, other relevant sources of information, and adequate laboratory and, as
appropriate, animal experimentation").
⁴⁷ See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) (mandating courts set aside agency actions that fail to
meet statutory requirements or reasoned decision-making standards); Motor Vehicle
Mfrs. Ass'n, 463 U.S. at 43 ("[A]n agency rule would be arbitrary and capricious if the
agency... entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an
explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before [it], or is so
25implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of
agency expertise.").
⁴⁸ See 21 C.F.R. § 312.42(b)(1)(i) (authorizing clinical hold on investigations
presenting "unreasonable risk" to human subjects); International Council for
Harmonisation, Guidance on Nonclinical Safety Studies for the Conduct of Human
Clinical Trials and Marketing Authorization for Pharmaceuticals: M3(R2), 74 Fed.
Reg. 62,061 (Nov. 27, 2009) (requiring preclinical safety assessment using all
available methods).
⁴⁹ See Attarwala H, TGN1412: From Discovery to Disaster, J Young Pharm. 2(3):332-
336 (2010), https://doi.org/10.4103/0975-1483.66810 (highlighting how cytokine
storm tragedy "brought into focus like never before the importance of animal studies"
in ensuring human safety).
⁵⁰ See Wax PM, Elixirs, Diluents, and the Passage of the 1938 Federal Food, Drug
and Cosmetic Act, Ann Intern Med. 122(6):456-461 (1995),
https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-122-6-199503150-00009 (describing preventable
deaths from elixir sulfanilamide as "the most consequential mass poisoning of the
20th century" and impetus for amending FDCA to mandate animal toxicity studies).
⁵¹ See, e.g., Patel C, FDA Clinical Hold of CAR-T Cell Therapy Trials Reveals
Potential of Chromosomal Abnormality, BioPharma Dive (Jan. 27, 2022),
https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/fda-clinical-hold-allogene-car-t-study-
chromosomal-abnormality/617418/ (reporting unanticipated "chromosomal
abnormality...in a bone marrow biopsy" that forced FDA to halt CAR-T cell trials
despite preclinical testing).
⁵² See, e.g., Bluebird Bio Resumes Two Clinical Gene Therapy Trials After Finding
No Link To Cancer, STAT (May 2, 2022),
https://www.statnews.com/2022/05/02/bluebird-hits-pause-on-gene-therapy-trials-
after-new-cancer-cases/ (describing bluebird bio's discovery of two new cancer cases
among sickle cell patients receiving its investigational gene therapy, forcing
suspension of human trials for multiple products until causal mechanisms could be
evaluated).
26⁵³ EFSA Project on the use of NAMs to explore the immunotoxicity of PFAS,
https://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/supporting/pub/en-8926.
⁵⁴ Nonclinical regulatory immunotoxicity testing of nanomedicinal products,
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7507198/.
⁵⁵ FDA, Roadmap to Reducing Animal Testing in Preclinical Safety Studies at 47
(2025), https://www.fda.gov/media/186092/download?attachment.
⁵⁶ FDA, Development and Licensure of Vaccines to Prevent COVID-19: Guidance for
Industry at 10 (June 2020), https://www.fda.gov/media/139638/download.
⁵⁷ See HARMONIZATION OF PHARMACEUTICAL REGULATIONS IN THE
AMERICAS AND THE CARIBBEAN: STATUS REPORT, PAHO/WHO at 10, 35
(2010), https://www.paho.org/hq/dmdocuments/2010/harmonization-pharmaceutical-
regulation-americas-caribbean-2010-eng.pdf (noting common incorporation of FDA
approval standards in national laws throughout Latin America and the Caribbean).
⁵⁸ See Executive Decree No. 34535-S, Art. 5 (Costa Rica, June 2014) (establishing
automatic recognition of drug licenses granted by FDA); Executive Decree No.
2004/023, Art. 3 (Honduras, Mar. 2004) (similar).
⁵⁹ See GUIDE TO PHARMACEUTICAL REGULATORY AFFAIRS IN AFRICA AND
THE MIDDLE EAST, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, at 59 (2015),
https://www.dndi.org/wp-
content/uploads/2018/03/DNDi_Guide_Regulatory_Affairs_Middle-
East_Africa_2015.pdf (discussing prevalence of expedited registration schemes based
on "one-way" reliance on FDA marketing authorizations in numerous African
nations).
⁶⁰ See, e.g., Legislative Decree No. 79-2015, Art. 2 (El Salvador, Sept. 2015)
(mandating national recognition of investigational drugs approved by FDA, including
submission of reports on preclinical animal toxicity studies).
⁶¹ See ICH, GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR CLINICAL TRIALS: E8(R1), 62
Fed. Reg. 66,113 (Dec. 17, 1997),27https://database.ich.org/sites/default/files/E8_R1__Guideline.pdf ("Clinical trials are
an integral part of the development of medicinal products... [that] follow a logical
sequence of studies in animals and humans... to generate data [about] safety and
benefit-risk."); cf. INTERNATIONAL ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR HEALTH-
RELATED RESEARCH INVOLVING HUMANS, Council for International
Organizations of Medical Sciences & WHO, at 1, 61 (2016), https://cioms.ch/wp-
content/uploads/2017/01/WEB-CIOMS-EthicalGuidelines.pdf.
⁶² International Regulatory Harmonization - FDA, https://www.fda.gov/drugs/cder-
international-program/international-regulatory-harmonization.
⁶³ COSTA RICA - Harmonization of Pharmaceutical Products, https://central-
law.com/en/costa-rica-harmonization-of-pharmaceutical-products/.
⁶⁴ HARMONIZATION OF PHARMACEUTICAL REGULATIONS IN THE
AMERICAS AND THE CARIBBEAN: STATUS REPORT, PAHO/WHO at 10, 35
(2010), https://www.paho.org/hq/dmdocuments/2010/harmonization-pharmaceutical-
regulation-americas-caribbean-2010-eng.pdf.
⁶⁵ Executive Decree No. 34535-S, Art. 5 (Costa Rica, June 2014); Executive Decree
No. 2004/023, Art. 3 (Honduras, Mar. 2004).
⁶⁶ GUIDE TO PHARMACEUTICAL REGULATORY AFFAIRS IN AFRICA AND
THE MIDDLE EAST, Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, at 59 (2015),
https://www.dndi.org/wp-
content/uploads/2018/03/DNDi_Guide_Regulatory_Affairs_Middle-
East_Africa_2015.pdf.
⁶⁷ See Nuremberg Code (1947), supra note 4, art. 3 ("The experiment should be...
based on the results of animal experimentation.").
⁶⁸ See Declaration of Helsinki (2013), supra note 3, ¶ 21 ("Medical research involving
human subjects must conform to generally accepted scientific principles, be based on
a thorough knowledge of the scientific literature, other relevant sources of
information, and adequate laboratory and, as appropriate, animal
experimentation.").
28⁶⁹ See Protection of Human Subjects, 45 C.F.R. pt. 46 (HHS regulations governing
human subjects research protections, implementing the Belmont Report's ethical
principles and subsequent regulatory refinements).
⁷⁰ See HHS Scientific Integrity Policy (June 2024), supra note 6, at 2 (requiring "the
use of well-established scientific processes, including construct validity, reliability,
credibility, authenticity, generalizability, and dependability"), 6 ("When an Agency's
scientific information is found to be compromised or inadequate, corrections... must
be made expeditiously and publicly.").
⁷¹ See INTERNATIONAL ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR HEALTH-RELATED
RESEARCH INVOLVING HUMANS, Council for International Organizations of
Medical Sciences & WHO, at 1 (4th ed. 2016), https://cioms.ch/wp-
content/uploads/2017/01/WEB-CIOMS-EthicalGuidelines.pdf ("The first
international instrument on the ethics of medical research, the Nuremberg Code, was
promulgated in 1947 as a consequence of the trial of physicians who had conducted
atrocious experiments on unconsenting prisoners and detainees during World War
II... The Declaration of Helsinki... [later] provided guidelines... [that] underlie most
subsequent codes.").
⁷² Cf. HHS Scientific Integrity Policy (June 2024), supra note 6, at 2 (mandating
pursuit of scientific integrity "to the fullest extent permitted by law"); Menikoff J, The
Paradoxical Problem with Multiple-IRB Review, 363 New Eng. J. Med. 1591 (2010),
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMp1005101 (advocating conscientious pursuit of research
participant welfare within governing legal and ethical frameworks).
⁷³ The Nuremberg Code, Art. 3 (1947), supra note 4 ("The experiment should be so
designed and based on the results of animal experimentation... that the anticipated
results justify the performance of the experiment.").
⁷⁴ See Lo B & Grady C, Ethical Considerations in HIV Cure Research: Points to
Consider, Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 8(3):243-249 (2013),
https://doi.org/10.1097/COH.0b013e32835ea1c5 ("[A]nimal studies... can never
eliminate risk to research participants but are an important safeguard that can
establish biological plausibility, provide some indication of potential efficacy, and
29identify and quantify potential toxicities."); Wendler D, The Ethics of Animal
Research: A Survey of Pediatric Health Care Workers, Philos Ethics Humanit Med.
9:20 (2014), https://doi.org/10.1186/1747-5341-9-20 ("Most pediatric health care
workers believe that animal research is ethically acceptable, and most are willing to
be involved in animal research... [but] the level of approval for animal research is
directly related to the extent to which it is regulated.").
⁷⁵ See 21 U.S.C. § 355(i)(1)(A) (mandating "adequate" preclinical testing "to show
whether or not [a drug] is safe for use"); 21 C.F.R. § 312.23(a)(8) (specifying
requirements for "adequate information" from animal studies to demonstrate an
"acceptable level of safety for the institution of clinical investigations").
⁷⁶ Cf. Lederer SE, Research Without Borders: The Origins of the Declaration of
Helsinki, in THE ETHICS OF RESEARCH BIOBANKING 145, 151-52 (Solbakk JH,
Holm S & Hofmann B eds., 2009), https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-0-
387-93872-1_10 (recounting the Declaration of Helsinki's adaptive integration of
Nuremberg Code principles in a manner that "allowed for conscientious deviation
from the principles set down, placing the burden for such actions squarely on the
shoulders of the researchers" in scientifically justified circumstances).
⁷⁷ Cf. GUIDELINE ON STRATEGIES TO IDENTIFY AND MITIGATE RISKS FOR
FIRST-IN-HUMAN AND EARLY CLINICAL TRIALS WITH INVESTIGATIONAL
MEDICINAL PRODUCTS, European Medicines Agency at 5 (July 2017),
https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/scientific-guideline/guideline-strategies-
identify-mitigate-risks-first-human-early-clinical-trials-investigational_en.pdf
(endorsing "a more graduated, stepwise approach" to modifying preclinical testing
requirements for investigational agents "driven by a scientifically based assessment
of risk, rather than the application of rigid criteria").
⁷⁸ See 5 U.S.C. § 705 (conferring federal courts authority to stay agency actions
pending judicial review upon a finding that "justice so requires").
⁷⁹ Cf. 5 U.S.C. § 553(e) (requiring agencies to give interested parties the right to
petition for issuance, amendment, or repeal of rules); 21 U.S.C. § 371(h) (granting the
30HHS Secretary authority to "promulgate regulations for the efficient enforcement" of
the FDCA).
⁸⁰ Ibid.
⁸¹ Cf. HHS Scientific Integrity Policy (June 2024), supra note 6, at 2 (mandating
pursuit of scientific integrity "to the fullest extent permitted by law"); Menikoff J, The
Paradoxical Problem with Multiple-IRB Review, 363 New Eng. J. Med. 1591 (2010),
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMp1005101 (advocating conscientious pursuit of research
participant welfare within governing legal and ethical frameworks).
⁸² See THE ETHICS OF RESEARCH RELATED TO HEALTHCARE IN
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, Nuffield Council on Bioethics at 4, 60 (2002),
https://www.nuffieldbioethics.org/assets/pdfs/HRRDC-I-Chapter-2.pdf (highlighting
the paramount importance of safeguarding participant well-being in clinical research
through flexible, contextually appropriate regulatory mechanisms anchored in
universal ethical principles).
31
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59 Comments
I am opposed to abuse.
It’s outrageous what is going on and it needs stopping.
STOP THE POISONS DISGUISED AS MEDS. WE ARE NOT ‘USELESS EATERS’ TO BE CULLED!
We can never have another tragic/horrific disaster influenced with lies, censorship, and corruption again that was COVID and/or Worse!!! GOD Bless Humanity and Humankind
FDA Accountability to assure the efficacy and safety of all vaccines, medications and procedures PRIOR to approval is paramount. As is clear from the CV-19 vaccine data that we know about, not to mention that which has been concealed, make it clear that this is vital to codify into law regulations such that the safety and lives of Americans will not be sacrificed for profit as is so painfully clear from the CV-19 catastrophe, and from which the vaccinated are still suffering. Implementation of this guidance into law is clearly required to assure that this transgression by the FDA and other US agencies is not repeated.
All citizens need protection from this experimentation. Unintended or horrible consequences have already happened with the last rounds of injectibles that did not meet the safety requirements (no blind studies used, these were bypassed) and overarching powers have been harnessed to force populations to be injected. They using refusal to discriminate against some faith groups and this will be used to try to destroy Christianity. I cannot understand the hypocrisy involved in trying to control people groups when the very people involved say they are libertarian. What do they have to fear and why do they hate people who don’t agree with them? Never in my 60 + years have I seen such a degradation of morale, care for others and a concern for truth in the U S A.
I am opposed to what is proposed.
It’s the right thing to do! Common sense has to kick in somewhere, right?!
FDA Accountability to assure the efficacy and safety of all vaccines, medications and procedures PRIOR to approval is paramount. It is vital to codify into law regulations such that the safety and lives of Americans will not be sacrificed for profit as is so painfully clear from the CV-19 catastrophe, and from which the vaccinated are still suffering. Implementation of this guidance into law is clearly required to assure that this transgression by the FDA and other US agencies is not repeated.
The FDA is so corrupt
VALIDATE New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) before using humans as the new lab rats.
I care about the survival of the human race.
I am signing because the NAM does not address some specific chemicals/drugs, therefore missing substances that can/will make humans very ill or kill humans.
NO HUMANS INVOLVED IN THESE STUDIES!!!
humans must NOTbe used as lab rats.
FDA has too many work around/loopholes. Can we get some transparency here?!
the FDA must not eliminate animal studies as it is vital to ensure basic safety on living organisms before testing is done on human beings. To proceed with this plan would be foolhardy in the extreme.
I believe the US should lead in protecting the world from using humans as guinea pigs in dangerous research.
I fully support not testing on humans.
I believe animal testing is necessary to create treatments for human diseases. The body is too complex for AI or other methods of testing to be adequate to insure no harm will be done. We have lived through the disaster of Covid vaccines with the resulting deaths and disabilities so that many no longer trust the government health agencies. The FDA should become more cautious not less when testing new medications. This means animal testing is necessary not optional as difficult it is for us to accept.
I hate the FDA, the WHO, the CDC, all of these crooked liars behind everything evil being pumped into babies, adults and animals, under the guise of “what’s good “, when it’s all a bunch of cockamamie malarkey. Viruses don’t exist, there’s NOTHING wrong with supplements, and they are NOT MY LEADERS.I don’t know who they think they are, but they can stick their money where the sun don’t shine, along with all the military patented usaid funded chemtrail sprayers. I pray for their immediate demise!
Stop mandating we be your $$$ lab rats to experiment on. You/ we will all be held accountable for good or evil.
The practice of Informed consent has been largely abandoned. It Must be required! Recognizing the Nuremberg Code will rstore Informed Consent and save lives.
United States
What has been happening is not moral or correct!
I hope and pray there will be a precedent set for the world, in the U.S.A. facilitating SHUTTING DOWN the “pandemic” agreement.
Nuremberg, Helsinki and The Universal declaration of human rights are all there for good reason. By now, all of us are aware that when the government does something to “improve safety” they mean to kill us. Makary’s proposal illustrates this point well. COVID being the most recent of many instances of Government intervening to kill off the population. The 10 points of Nuremberg are necessary and should be enshrined into any medical research anywhere if that research includes Homo sapiens
Because I seen what the the covid vaccine did to many loved ones.
we have had enough of this crap
I’m a physician and have been working in Clinical Research. So I know the risks and with C-Gene Therapy we have an example about what happens when safety standards are denied.
I agree with the premise of the petition.
NUREMBERG CODE MUST PREVAIL! Humans are not lab rats!
I believe all living things matter.
I Love all creatures within existence. This is the end of experimentation in its totality. God Bless You! The People’s Victory
I agree with the Nuremberg code
I am signing because although I disagree with animal testing for so many things, like cosmetics, but when it comes to our health, and using Covid as an example, human studies are more important, provided they are carried out independently and all results, good and bad are included in the final report, with no cherry picking and massaging of statistics
I have no affinity for rats! YES, keep animal testing rather than rely on some AI-driven chip. I will never touch pharmaceuticals again, including the God-forsaken vaccines!
I value the enormous dignity in every human being. We should not be looked upon by AI as lab rats and treated with respect as children of God.
Humans are not lab rats to experiment on period
The US should follow the Neurmberg Code for medical research.
I am signing because I agree that FDA is trying to make drugs that align with their members’ cash flow will get approved in spite of the harm they cause without any warnings for the public. This is a conflict of interest and criminal. People pushing to eliminate actual clinical trials with animals and people who volunteer should be held accountable for all injuries incurred by people taking their drugs going forward.
This is pre-planned and part of an attack on human research ethics! Let’s stop it NOW!
We must codify Nuremberg Code principles in the FDA regs.
1. Marty Mccary…his judgement does not seem sound. 2. Trump OKing self-replicating vaccines.is VERY WRONG!! If that gets out every being on earth will carry that vaccine & spread it. DANGEROUS!!! 3. No animal testing?…if they cannot test it on animals, they should NEVER test it on HUMANS! Is the FDA really working for humans at all? ..it doesn’t seem so.
It’s long overdue.
Animal studies are critical to know what new drugs could do to humans! But they must be done with regard for the animals used for testing!
Animal studies have their place in research.
Medical safety for people needs is of the upmost importance. Seeing how experimental drugs and medicines react to animals that share much of our biology and physiology is paramount to reliable results before recommending their use for people.
Using NAMs instead of animal studies is a dangerous proposal and it’s how they could get away with an attack on immune systems, so it really needs to be stopped from happening.
Nuremberg Principles require animal testing, which also has historical precedent to New Approach Methodologies NAMs. It remains imperative to not violate the scientific analysis and methods that establish the rules of science. Any changes to the rules requires extraordinary examination of ALL impacts both advantageous and especially disadvantageous in terms of any impacts upon all the other scientific rules for fact-collection and analysis. FDA is behaving unscientifically at this point where it has not collected substantive public comment and independent expert review of deviating from animal testing, nor how the analysis of human safety risks may become faulty. The recent history of the FDA approval of experimental COVID injections that allowed public misinformation that these were “vaccines” when they were experimental mRNA gene therapy raises red flags in the direction of anything that FDA fast tracks as potential to harm the public in favor of its staff self-interest with revolving doors into industry that has not properly considered full human safety risks or ignored this harm. This must stop immediately. We must have sufficient public comment immediately before any changes occur to evaluate human safety risks. We must have sufficient independent expert review of the alternative methods carefully identifying all advantages and disadvantages of the proposed change in methodology especially in terms of human safety risks. Carelessness of the FDA is not to be tolerated.
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