National Animal Resource Facility for Biomedical Research

National Animal Resource Facility for Biomedical Research
Established 2015
Research type Public
Field of research
Animal Biotechnology
Director Suresh Pothani (In charge)[1]
Location Hyderabad, India
Campus Turkapally
Operating agency
ICMR

The National Animal Resource Facility for Biomedical Research formerly the National Center for Laboratory Animal Sciences is an Indian Biomedical research facility, and vivarium under the Indian Council of Medical Research. The new 33rd flagship center of ICMR was founded in 2015, at Genome Valley in Hyderabad, India.[2] The center is a state of the art Animal house and Animal sciences facility located near Turkapally, Shamirpet spread over 103 acres of land.[3][4]

The institute proposes to breed specific pathogen free animals such as mice, rats, hamsters, rabbit, guinea pigs, mini pigs, canines, swines, equines, horses, sheeps, and goats; various species of non-human primates such as bonnet monkey, cynomolgus monkey, pig tail monkey, owl monkey and squirrel monkey among others needed for research purpose. By tenth year of its functioning, the institute proposes to breed 1500 animals annually. Though the project was conceived way back in 2008 by the UPA Government, it got delayed due to financial and technical reasons. However, it got impetus in 2015.[2]

Background

On 18th November 2015 the union Government of India, approved a long-pending proposal envisaging Rs 338.58 crore-world-class-facility for breeding beagle dogs, horses, and monkeys besides other animals on a large scale to indigenously meet the needs of the country’s pharma firms for drug testing and clinical research. Subsequently, The National Center For Laboratory Animal Sciences at the National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad is being integrated to form the National Animal Resource Facility for Biomedical Research.[2]

History

“The need for the NARF-BR has been consistently felt as the existing institutes like Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow and National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad are working on small animals, mostly rodents. They cannot meet the demand and requirement of biomedical sector, which has no option but to depend on countries like Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia for testing their products,” said a senior official from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Sharing the cabinet decision with reporters after the cabinet meeting, Manoj Pant, Joint Secretary of Department of Health Research in the Ministry, “The institute is expected to cut down research cost by 60 per cent and consequently drugs and vaccine by about 30 per cent in the long run.” For instance, while presently research cost in US and China is around Rs 2 crore for 180 days, similar tests for same duration at NARBF will cost just Rs 51 lakhs.[5][6]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.