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FDA Achieves Year 1 Goals Replacing Animal Testing in Drug Development

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Summary

The FDA announced achievement of Year 1 goals under its April 2025 Roadmap to Reducing Animal Testing in Preclinical Safety Studies. The agency released draft guidance on reducing nonhuman primate testing in monoclonal antibody development, updated horseshoe crab-derived endotoxin testing guidance, and qualified the first AI-based drug development tool. A searchable database clarifying acceptable alternative methods was also launched, alongside a formal NIH partnership and permanent pathway for qualifying innovative drug development tools.

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What changed

The FDA released a Year 1 progress report on its 2025 roadmap to reduce animal testing in drug development, marking one year of action since April 2025. The agency published draft guidance documents on nonhuman primate testing reduction and horseshoe crab endotoxin testing, qualified its first AI-based drug development tool, and launched a searchable database of acceptable alternative methods. A permanent qualification pathway for innovative tools and a formal NIH partnership were also established.\n\nPharmaceutical companies, drug developers, and clinical investigators should monitor FDA's new approach methodologies (NAMs) guidance as the agency signals increased acceptance of in vitro assays, computational toxicology, and human-derived platforms as alternatives to animal studies. Firms engaged in monoclonal antibody development or endotoxin testing may face evolving expectations as these draft guidances move toward finalization.

Archived snapshot

Apr 21, 2026

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More Press Announcements

For Immediate Release:

April 20, 2026

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today announced it achieved its key first-year goals in the implementation of its April 2025 Roadmap to Reducing Animal Testing in Preclinical Safety Studies, marking one year of transformative action to modernize drug development through innovative, human-relevant science.

“One year ago, we issued an ambitious roadmap to eliminate unnecessary animal testing and replace  animal testing with more precise ways of predicting drug safety in humans,” said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H. “In addition to ushering in more scientifically accurate way to test drugs before they are used in humans, the agency has made great strides to reduce  research and development costs, which will lower drug prices for everyday Americans”

From a purely scientific standpoint, animals are not a great model of how well drugs perform in humans. Historically, more than 90 percent of drugs that clear animal studies do not receive FDA approval, often due to safety or efficacy issues identified in human trials. To address this gap, FDA is advancing use of new approach methodologies (NAMs) —including advanced in vitro systems, computational modeling, and human-derived platforms—that better reflect human biology and improve prediction of drug effects.

Unlike previous guidance to industry, the FDA’s 2025 roadmap strategy established specific timeframes for phasing out animal testing where equivalent or better alternatives exist. Today, the agency released a follow-up report summarizing the agency’s progress in implementing the roadmap and clarifying its next steps.

Since issuing the roadmap, the agency has:

  • Released draft guidance on the reduction or elimination of nonhuman primate testing in monoclonal antibody development.
  • Updated guidance to support a transition from horseshoe crab-derived endotoxin testing, which could spare more than one million animals per year.
  • Working to reduce or eliminate animal used for FDA approval when drugs have demonstrated safety from their broad use in humans in other countries.
  • Released draft guidance expanding the use of weight-of-evidence approaches to support the use of NAMs, enabling drug developers to more readily incorporate in vitro assays, computational toxicology, and other human-relevant models to generate evidence across a wider array of safety endpoints.
  • Qualified the first artificial intelligence-based drug development tool, demonstrating the utility of leveraging cutting edge in silico models to support regulatory decision-making.
  • Launched a searchable database clarifying where alternative methods are acceptable, and established close collaboration with international regulators to align strategies. To sustain progress, FDA has deployed key infrastructure, including a permanent pathway for qualifying innovative drug development tools, cross-center scientific reviews, and a formal partnership with the National Institutes of Health. Together, these efforts are advancing a shift toward human-relevant science as the default approach to drug evaluation.

This transition is expected to improve prediction of drug safety, accelerate development timelines, reduce costs, and expand patient access to innovative therapies, while significantly reducing reliance on animal testing.

FDA will continue working with partners across government, industry, and academia to expand the use of these approaches and further modernize drug development.

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Boilerplate The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, radiation-emitting electronic products, and for regulating tobacco products.

  • ## Content current as of:

04/20/2026

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FDA
Published
April 20th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Pharmaceutical companies Drug manufacturers Clinical investigators
Industry sector
3254 Pharmaceutical Manufacturing
Activity scope
NAMs adoption Drug safety testing Alternative method qualification
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Pharmaceuticals
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Healthcare Public Health

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