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Publication: BioSpace

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has released new draft guidance designed to make it easier for drug developers to use alternatives to animal testing. These alternatives—known as “new approach methodologies” (NAMs)—include lab-based cell studies, computer modeling, and other human-relevant techniques that can predict how a drug behaves without relying on animal experiments.

A key goal of the guidance is to reduce uncertainty for biopharmaceutical companies by clearly outlining how these methods can be validated and used in regulatory submissions. By setting these standards, the agency aims to make non-animal testing methods more credible and widely accepted.

Overall, the guidance signals a broader shift toward modernizing drug development, reducing reliance on animal testing, and encouraging faster, more human-relevant safety assessments.

Published: March 24, 2026

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