A qualitative study of the barriers to using blinding in in vivo experiments and suggestions for improvement

In animal experiments, blinding (also known as masking) is a methodological strategy to reduce the risk that scientists, animal care staff, or other staff involved in the research may consciously or subconsciously influence the outcome. Lack of masking has been shown to correlate with an overestimat...

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Published inPLoS biology Vol. 20; no. 11; p. e3001873
Main Authors Karp, Natasha A, Pearl, Esther J, Stringer, Emma J, Barkus, Chris, Ulrichsen, Jane Coates, Percie du Sert, Nathalie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 17.11.2022
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:In animal experiments, blinding (also known as masking) is a methodological strategy to reduce the risk that scientists, animal care staff, or other staff involved in the research may consciously or subconsciously influence the outcome. Lack of masking has been shown to correlate with an overestimation of treatment efficacy and false positive findings. We conducted exploratory interviews across academic and a commercial setting to discuss the implementation of masking at four stages of the experiment: during allocation and intervention, during the conduct of the experiment, during the outcome assessment, and during the data analysis. The objective was to explore the awareness, engagement, perceptions, and the barriers to implementing masking in animal experiments. We conducted multiple interviews, to explore 30 different experiments, and found examples of excellent practice but also areas where masking was rarely implemented. Significant barriers arose from the operational and informatic systems implemented. These systems have prioritised the management of welfare without considering how to allow researchers to use masking in their experiments. For some experiments, there was a conflict between the management of welfare for an individual animal versus delivering a robust experiment where all animals are treated in the same manner. We identified other challenges related to the level of knowledge on the purpose of masking or the implementation and the work culture. The exploration of these issues provides insight into how we, as a community, can identify the most significant barriers in a given research environment. Here, we offer practical solutions to enable researchers to implement masking as standard. To move forward, we need both the individual scientists to embrace the use of masking and the facility managers and institutes to engage and provide a framework that supports the scientists.
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I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: JCU and NAK have shareholdings in AstraZeneca. EJP, CB and NPdS are NC3Rs staff; role includes promoting the ARRIVE guidelines and the Experimental Design Assistant (EDA). EJS is a former NC3Rs staff member.
ISSN:1545-7885
1544-9173
1545-7885
DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001873