A new online Master Class course to train scientists in testing cosmetics and chemicals without using animals is being hailed as a game-changer for cruelty-free testing. Featuring real-world case studies to walk scientists through animal-free testing step by step, the curriculum launched by the Animal-Free Safety Assessment collaboration has attracted over 1,200 participants from nearly 70 countries since its debut in 2023, highlighting a global interest in innovative, ethical testing methods, the Humane Society International said in a press release.
The final module is now open for registration, completing the ten-module course. The full AFSA Master Class is freely available online at AFSAcollaboration.org/masterclass.
The course is the result of wide-ranging contributions from global experts in animal-free safety science. It has been created with inputs from industry, including the likes of Avon Products Inc., L’Oréal, Procter & Gamble, and Unilever, method developers such as Institute for In Vitro Sciences, and regulatory and animal protection experts like Humane Society International.
The course guides users through every stage of “next-generation risk assessment” culminating in advanced techniques like data integration to ensure robust consumer safety conclusions. These cutting-edge methodologies not only eliminate the need for painful animal-based testing, but also provide more valid and reliable results concerning the safety of chemicals and products, the Humane Society International said in its release.
The aim of the AFSA Master Class is to provide the educational building blocks for lasting change, encouraging kinder scientific practices that will also better ensure human safety. That regulators, product developers, contract research organizations, and academic professionals from across the globe are involved in its development is a testament to the collaborative nature of animal-free safety science worldwide, the Humane Society International said.
Dr Catherine Willett, senior director of science and regulatory affairs at Humane Society International and principal coordinator of the course, said, “Consumers and companies alike want to move away from painful and outdated animal tests, but learning more about the cutting-edge tools available in the animal-free toolbox, and how to use them to make safety decisions, can be challenging. The AFSA Master Class demystifies animal-free safety assessment, making it easier for companies to replace rats, rabbits, and guinea pigs with advanced non-animal models and computer simulations.”
Course participant Mark Broussard, managing partner of Desert in Bloom Cosmetics Lab, said, “The AFSA Master Class helped me understand the process of determining the safety of a novel cosmetic ingredient using non-animal methods, since I am working with a novel plant extract that has not before been safety-tested or used in cosmetic/therapeutic products for human use. I think the new approach methodologies will yield more valid, more reliable results on the safety of cosmetic ingredients without subjecting animals to the painful animal-based testing procedures.”
“The safety of the cosmetics and personal care products that consumers use and trust every day is of the utmost importance,” according to Dr Julia H. Fentem, executive vice-president, safety, environmental and regulatory science at Unilever. “Our unique AFSA Master Class programme is focused on the safety assessment of cosmetic products and ingredients without generating new animal data and covers all aspects of using non-animal tools and data for internal company decisions-making as well as regulatory safety assessments.”
The AFSA Master Class will help to equip key stakeholders with the right tools and knowledge to better explore animal-free methods of safety testing and contribute to the wider shift towards the cruelty-free future of cosmetic and chemical safety science, the Humane Society International said.
SOURCE: PR Newswire