Dieter Luetticken Award 2008 Recognizes Development of New Vaccine Quality Control Assay
07 Avril 2009 - 12:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
BOXMEER, Netherlands, April 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health today announces that the
Dieter Luetticken Award 2008 for alternatives in animal testing
goes to Dr. Ivo Claassen for a project that he has managed at the
Central Veterinary Institute (CVI), Lelystad (the Netherlands). The
announcement was made by Prof. Coenraad Hendriksen, chairperson of
an independent expert jury panel and Professor of Alternatives to
Animal Testing at Utrecht University (the Netherlands). Dr.
Claassen had a leading role in an interdisciplinary team with Dr.
Riks Maas and Dr. Hok Oei from the CVI in close collaboration with
Dr. Jean Marc Spieser and Dr. Catherine Milne of the European
Directorate on Quality of Medicines (EDQM), Strasbourg (France).
The team developed an in vitro potency test for the routine quality
control of inactivated Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV) vaccines.
Previously, quality control of NDV vaccines included an in vivo
potency assay in chickens. The new method allows avoiding the use
of chickens and has now been included in the respective European
Pharmacopoeia monograph as an additional potency assay to release
NDV vaccines. The research project was largely funded by the
Department of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality in the
Netherlands. "The new in vitro potency test is an attractive
alternative for the existing in vivo potency tests especially with
regard to the objective of the European regulatory authorities to
replace, reduce and refine (3R) the use of laboratory animals for
production and quality control of immuno-biologicals," said jury
chair Prof. Hendriksen. Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health, a
leading global animal health company, sponsors the international
Dieter Luetticken Award for alternatives in animal testing to
support individual scientists and life science research
institutions that make significant contributions to the 3R-concept,
i.e. reducing, refining and/or replacing the use of animals in
testing for development and manufacturing of veterinary medicines.
The Company recently became a member of EPAA, the European
Partnership for Alternative Approaches to Animal Testing. The total
amount of the award is euro 20,000 and will be presented to Dr.
Claassen on September 3, 2009 during the award session at the 7th
World Congress on Alternatives and Animal Use in the Life Sciences
which will take place in Rome (Italy) from August 30 to September
3, 2009. Candidates for the Dieter Luetticken Award are selected by
a jury panel composed of experts from public institutions in the
animal health and animal testing sector. Applications for the
Dieter Luetticken Award 2009 can be submitted until November 15,
2009. For submissions and more details, please contact
Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health - Global Communications
Animal Health (). About the Dieter Luetticken Award The Dieter
Luetticken Award for alternatives in animal testing was established
in 2004 and is granted each year to academic scientists or
not-for-profit life sciences research institutions that have made a
significant contribution to the 3R-concept for the R&D and
production of veterinary medicines. The international award's scope
covers in vitro models used in R&D which replace animal testing
for licensing purposes, methods that improve quality of life of
laboratory animals as well as studies aimed at reducing or avoiding
the use of animals in efficacy, safety and quality testing in the
production of biologicals and pharmaceuticals for animals. The
award is named after Dr. Dieter Luetticken, a committed researcher
in microbiology and virology. He has guided and shaped R&D at
former Intervet for more than a quarter of a century. Dr.
Luetticken retired from Intervet in 2003 as Vice-President and Head
of R&D. Previous winners of the Dieter Luetticken Award are:
Prof. Andrew Hemphill, Switzerland (2004), Dr. Mark Stevens, United
Kingdom (2006) and Prof. George Gettinby, United Kingdom (2007).
About Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health
Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health is focused on the research,
development, manufacturing and marketing of animal health products.
The company offers customers one of the broadest, most innovative
Animal Health portfolios, spanning products to support performance
and to prevent, treat and control disease in all major farm and
companion animal species. The company is based in Boxmeer, The
Netherlands. For more information about Intervet/Schering-Plough
Animal Health visit: http://www.intervet.com/ Schering-Plough is an
innovation-driven, science-centered global health care company.
Through its own biopharmaceutical research and collaborations with
partners, Schering-Plough creates therapies that help save and
improve lives around the world. The company applies its
research-and-development platform to human prescription, animal
health and consumer health care products. Schering-Plough's vision
is to "Earn Trust, Every Day" with the doctors, patients, customers
and other stakeholders served by its colleagues around the world.
The company is based in Kenilworth, N.J., and its Web site is
http://www.schering-plough.com/ DATASOURCE: Schering-Plough
CONTACT: Media, Paul Geurts of Schering-Plough, +31-485-587893, ,
or investors, Janet Barth or Joseph Romanelli, +1-908-298-7904
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