Many of the primates, mostly rhesus macaques, at the Tulane
National Research Centre are destined for use in scientific
research for COVID-19.
The facility, with high-level biosafety laboratories able to
handle biological threat agents like anthrax, was
well-positioned to pivot quickly to COVID-19 research when the
coronavirus pandemic hit.
Primates' DNA and physiological features make them ideal models
for human comparison when studying diseases, said Skip Bohm,
associate director and chief veterinary medical officer at the
Tulane center.
"Non-human primates are really critical for us to understand not
only the disease and how it affects the organism but also to
compare treatments, therapies, vaccinations," Bohm told Reuters.
Rhesus macaques, the primate species most commonly used for
scientific research, make up the majority of the center's
breeding colony and the 200 adult animals used in its
coronavirus experiments over the past year.
COVID-19-related studies by the centre include one published in
the National Academy of Sciences scientific journal in February
that found older individuals with high body mass index and more
severe COVID-19 infection exhaled more respiratory droplets,
allowing them to become so-called "super-spreaders."
Primates were the crux of the study, said Chad Roy, study
coauthor and the center's director of infectious disease
aerobiology.
Among future work, the center plans to study "long COVID", the
incidence of one in 10 diagnosed patients remaining unwell long
after their acute infection.
"There are many different therapeutics that are coming online
that need to be tested, and with the network that we have, we
can compare one treatment to another," said center director Jay
Rappaport, referring to the facility's role coordinating the
COVID-19 work of the seven U.S. primate research centers.
Once experiments are concluded, the Tulane center euthanizes the
monkeys for tissue collection, allowing researchers to study
COVID-19's impact beyond the respiratory system.
Kathy Guillermo, a spokesperson for People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals (PETA), said primates should not be used
for testing.
"They wouldn't have to kill them if they didn't use them," she
said. "What we're going to learn of value is going to be what we
learn from human beings."
(Reporting by Nathan Frandino; Editing by Karishma Singh and
Jane Wardell)
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