Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) takes
decisive action to phase out animal testing by helping developers
to make greater use of New Approach Methodologies (NAMs).
By offering early review of non‑animal data and clarifying how it
will be assessed, the UK's medicines regulator aims to give
developers more confidence when making marketing applications
based on evidence generated without animal testing.
The move supports the Government's long-term strategy to reduce use
of animals in drug development, where complete elimination is not
yet feasible, and ensure medicines continue to meet rigorous
standards of safety and efficacy.
Beach, Interim Executive Director
Healthcare Quality and Access said:
A clearer regulatory route for medicines developed without animal
testing will help accelerate the transition to modern, predictive
science and support the Government's strategy to reduce and
ultimately replace animals in research.
Advances such as AI‑driven analysis and human‑derived cell models
mean some medicines no longer require animal studies to
demonstrate safety and efficacy.
Our offer to review study data ahead of a full marketing
application is designed to help researchers who are adopting
these approaches build the robust evidence needed to demonstrate
safety and efficacy.
Clearer principles for a new era of medicines development
While each application will be assessed on a case-by-case basis,
considering the totality of the evidence presented and the
proposed clinical use, the guidance sets out general regulatory
principles:
To support the use of NAMs and reduce perceived risks of
approaches that do not involve animal testing, the MHRA has
committed to review preliminary data from drug trials that use
non-animal models. By the end of 2026, companies with a product
developed without animal testing can have Module 4 of their
Marketing Authorisation application reviewed by the MHRA in
advance.
In this scheme, companies will submit Module 4, the Investigator
Brochure and the final report of at least one clinical trial. The
MHRA will give a non-binding written opinion that accepts the
adequacy of the data or explains deficiencies. This will be
included in the Marketing Authorisation application, alongside
the Module 4 previously submitted and any updated version. The
MHRA will undertake a further review, in consultation with the
Commission on Human Medicines, and either endorse or reject the
application, with reasons for any rejection. Companies submitting
Module 4 in advance will be charged a fee to recover
administrative costs and discourage unsuitable
applications.
Notes to editors
-
In November 2025, the Government published Replacing animals in
science: A strategy to support the development, validation
and uptake of alternative methods.
- New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) are modern, non-animal
scientific methods used to assess the safety, efficacy, and
biological effects of medicines and chemicals. Instead of relying
on traditional animal studies, NAMs generate data using
human-relevant systems and computational tools.
- Review of Module 4 relates only to Marketing Authorisation
applications and has no impact on Clinical Trial Authorisation
applications.
- The MHRA is responsible for regulating all
medicines and medical devices in the UK by ensuring they work and
are acceptably safe. All our work is underpinned by robust
and fact-based judgements to ensure that the benefits justify any
risks.