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Cancer-SOLES

Cancer-SOLES

Cancer-SOLES is a new digital platform for the systematic and continuous preparation of...

3Rs PROJECT GRANTS

3Rs PROJECT GRANTS

This will be our main call for project funding, now every-other year. Open to academic researchers based in Switzerland aiming for significant 3Rs advancement. This effectively replaces the previous “Open Call” and “Targeted Call” schemes, and is setup to provide increased funding per call.

Refinement Grants

Refinement Grants

Advancing responsibility: Reducing Surplus Animals and Promoting Change

Gentle Handling Report 2025

Gentle Handling Report 2025

In 2020 and 2024, the Swiss 3RCC and the Swiss Culture of Care Network carried out two surveys on the use of non-aversive mouse handling methods among animal care and research staff in Switzerland. Here are the results from the surveys.

3Rs Awards 2024

3Rs Awards 2024

The Swiss 3R Competence Centre (3RCC) honours the Award winners: Fides Zenk, Doris Zauchner & Manon Murdeu for groundbreaking, human-relevant research replacing and reducing animal use in science.

FRONTIERS YOUNG MINDS: Introducing the 3Rs to young minds

FRONTIERS YOUNG MINDS: Introducing the 3Rs to young minds

Enjoy highlights from an engagement event where students from the International School of Lausanne met scientific authors, educating them about the 3R principle of animal experiments: replacement, reduction, and refinement.

3Rs DOCTORATE PROGRAMME

3Rs DOCTORATE PROGRAMME

The Swiss 3R Competence Centre announces its 2025 3Rs Doctorate Grant scheme, supporting innovative PhD research that advances the replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal use in scientific procedures. This competitive grant scheme follows a two-stage application process and aims to develop a new generation of researchers with strong 3Rs principles.

KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER GRANT

KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER GRANT

One of the challenges facing the implementation of 3Rs approaches is often the initial...

Annual Report 2024

Annual Report 2024

As 2024 marks the close of the 3RCC’s second federal funding period, we reflect on a phase of notable progress across our core mandates.

3Rs Info Hub

3Rs Info Hub

The 3Rs InfoHub guides you toward the best approaches intended to replace, reduce or refine animal...

3Rs Info Hub

Cellosaurus

The Cellosaurus (https://www.cellosaurus.org/) is a knowledge resource on cell lines. It attempts...

Bringing Story to the 3Rs

The December 2023 ECRN event, "Bringing Story to the 3Rs," brought together a dynamic...

3Rs Hackathon 2024

3Rs Hackathon 2024

In this one-day on-site workshop we brought together researcher from varynig fields...

PUBLICATION: Refining Research to Improve the Lives of Laboratory Mice

3Rs for Young Minds!

Young people are the next generation of scientists, decision-makers and (hopefully) informed citizens. Helping them understand the 3Rs of animal use in research empowers them to think critically about science, ethics and innovation.

An in vitro metastatic niche model of brain metastasis

The home lab (Rubin Lab, DBMR; University of Bern) focuses on in vitro models to investigate lineage plasticity and metastasis and has most recently developed a novel organoid-based model to examine tumour-host interactions and the metastatic niche utilising spatially resolved cerebral organoids.

Development, validation, and establishment of intestinal organoids to study host-parasite interactions in veterinary medicine

Development, validation, and establishment of intestinal organoids to study host-parasite interactions in veterinary medicine

At my home lab I developed an air-liquid-interface in-vitro model of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes) respiratory tract to study host-parasite interactions in canids. This model is crucial for understanding the pathogenesis and immune responses in canid lungworm infections and can be extended to study further infectious pathogens, given that foxes are reservoirs for many infective agents. Our model is used for studies on the tissue-specific response to lungworm infections using transcriptomic and proteomic approaches.

Moving towards Personalized Medicine: Precision Cut Skin Slices to Model Gene-Responsive Signatures for Novel and Existing Therapies for Systemic Sclerosis Patients

The Centre of Experimental Rheumatology specializes in the investigation of rheumatic and skeletal disorders, including systemic sclerosis (SSc). SSc is a paradigm fibrotic disease characterized by multi-organ fibrosis, including the skin. Currently, tools to investigate SSc pathogenesis include traditional two-dimensional (2D) cell culture and animal models, both of which are established at our institute.

An automated system for the assessment of pain and wellbeing in laboratory mice

An automated system for the assessment of pain and wellbeing in laboratory mice

Monitoring the well-being of mice in research labs is often overlooked, and current methods rely on subjective observations, leading to potential biases and variations between different observers. Recent advancements in machine vision and learning tools offer a solution by automating and standardizing these measures. This project aims to create an all-in-one automated platform (both hardware and software) for monitoring animal welfare.

Providing immunocompetence to human microtissue bladder models

Providing immunocompetence to human microtissue bladder models

At my home lab, we established several human bladder microtissue models to understand host-uropathogen interactions in patient-like scenarios, to be tested for novel urinary tract infections (UTI) therapeutics. However, they still lack the immune cell component, which is a crucial need for the field and a main expertise of the group of Dr. Molly Ingersoll (host).

Implementation of the liver fibrosis AOP in a novel liver chip

Implementation of the liver fibrosis AOP in a novel liver chip

Our research group aims to implement various biological questions and models in microphysiological systems (MPS). We have established an iPSC-derived blood-brain barrier on a Mimetas chip (Burgio et al., 2023) and an in vitro kidney model on the Vitrofluid platform (Specioso et al., 2022).

A no-stress alternative to oral gavage in mice

A no-stress alternative to oral gavage in mice

The current method of oral gavage in mice using gavage needles is a source of stress for the animals, potentially misleading or invalidating the results of an experiment. There are currently minimal alternatives to this method.

Standardising human organoid-based drug permeability assays

With the Modernization Act 2.0 signed in early 2023, the FDA paves the way for more new drug applications without animal testing. This decision puts researcher and drug developers back into the drivers seat to quickly bring non-animal-based pre-clinical studies to a level of trust, validation and broad acceptance by the public and regulatory authorities.

Multidimensional models for in vitro screening of endocrine disrupting agents

Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are substances, both natural and human-made, present in everyday items like plastics, detergents, food, and cosmetics. These chemicals can adversely affect the health and development of both animals and humans. EDCs have been associated with disruptions in the endocrine system, contributing to conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity, early puberty, infertility, and various cancers.

Refinement of anesthesia in neonatal mice

Refinement of anesthesia in neonatal mice

The choice of anesthesia for neonatal mice lacks a consensus and directly impacts animal welfare and research outcomes. The methods used until now to assess animal welfare do not provide a complete understanding of potential pain or discomfort experienced during anesthesia.

Scoresheet for Fish

Scoresheet for Fish

With the refinement grant, we intend to develop, evaluate, implement, and publish score sheets for individuals and groups of fish. With the support of all fish labs of the University of Bern, the Experimental Animal Center (EAC) of the University of Bern, and the Institute for Laboratory Animal Science Zurich, we will (1) collect existing scoresheets from fish labs, but also from other experimental animal groups, (2) evaluate the scientific and grey literature on fish welfare assessment, and (3) retrieve information from fish facilities through visits and interviews on scorable indicators for fish welfare.

Minimizing the number of rodents used in the discovery of bacteriophage derived antimicrobials through candidate screening in zebrafish embryos

Minimizing the number of rodents used in the discovery of bacteriophage derived antimicrobials through candidate screening in zebrafish embryos

Antibiotic resistance poses a significant global health threat. A growing number of bacteria, such as multiple drug resistant (MDR) Pseudomonas aeruginosa and vancomycin resistant Enterococcus faecalis, cause life-threatening disease in humans, which cannot be treated efficiently. Bacteriophages, which are viruses infecting bacteria, and proteins derived from bacteriophages show promise as alternatives to antibiotics, demonstrating efficacy against antibiotic-resistant strains. Developing new antimicrobials typically involves testing in animal models, commonly mice.

A unique technology producing standardized lung cancer organoids in air/liquid interface conditions: a new alternative to animal experimentation

A unique technology producing standardized lung cancer organoids in air/liquid interface conditions: a new alternative to animal experimentation

Lung cancer ranks among the most widespread cancers globally and is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in Switzerland, with Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC) representing approximately 85% of cases. Researchers commonly rely on animal experiments to study NSCLC. Lung Cancer Organoids (LCO) derived from human biopsies offer a promising alternative to animal testing for research, personalized medicine, and drug screening.

Personal behavior profiles – tracking dogs for welfare monitoring

We optimize our kennels for videorecording so that we are capable of applying the latest in deep/machine learning based animal tracking/welfare monitoring techniques. We use behaviour flow analysis to build individual behaviour profiles for each of the dogs at baseline and monitor how they change in response to training and treatment

Ex-utero culture of mouse embryos

Ex-utero culture of mouse embryos

Our main aim is to expand the knowledge about mammalian brain development under physiological and teratogenic conditions. We consider that understanding how the balance between different kinds of progenitors is affected by teratogenic agents is of critical scientific interest. This knowledge will allow us to better interpret previous knowledge on the patterning of the brain and provide an example of the organizing principles of the dorsoventral axis at the cellular level.

Refined automated assessment of anhedonia, motivation and attention in mice

Refined automated assessment of anhedonia, motivation and attention in mice

The behavioral assessment of anhedonia, motivation and attention represents a cornerstone of behavioral neuroscience, but is stressful and tedious for both, the involved animals and researchers. We will develop and promote protocols for assessing these behavioral paradigms fully automated in IntelliCage system. Thereby mice can voluntarily perform test sessions, while acting naturally in an undisturbed environment that also includes their normal social habitat.

Need and efficacy of pre-operative fasting in Sheep

Need and efficacy of pre-operative fasting in Sheep

Pre-operative fasting is a common procedure in veterinary medicine. It intends to reduce the filling of the stomach to avoid anesthetic complications. Sheep have a complex digestive system, recommendations of pre-operative fasting in this species are not evidence based. The practice can cause metabolic imbalances, complicating anesthesia

iPSC-derived macrophages for a Lung-on-chip (LOC) model of bacterial colonisation

iPSC-derived macrophages for a Lung-on-chip (LOC) model of bacterial colonisation

Current Lung on-chip (LOC) models are promising but lack resident immune cells especially macrophages. Our main project of Lung-Microbiota on-chip (LMOC) aims to (i) reduce animal experiments (short-term) and (ii) completely replace murine models of lung bacterial colonisation (long-term). The iPSC Macrophages will form an important component in this 3D human cell model.

Intraoperative nociception in animals: time to address and manage the issue efficaciously

During general anaesthesia, the brain does not perceive pain, but the spinal cord could still encode and elaborate the stimulus (nociception). Not recognising nociception is detrimental during general anaesthesia and can play a pivotal  role in the development of post-operative and chronic pain. We propose the use of an objective method i.e. tracking of the nociceptive withdrawal thresholds as mean to evaluate nociception in animals undergoing general anaesthesia.

Human engineered heart models to investigate mechanisms of cardiac maturation

Since 2014, Marsano group has developed several functional healthy and disease (hibernate myocardium-like or scar-like) engineered 3D micro- and macro-scale cardiac tissues. Although neonatal cardiac cells were predominantly used to obtain proof-of-principles, the harness of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CM) is fundamental to investigate clinically relevant cardiac damage and repair mechanisms. My PhD projects would also immensely benefit the use of human iPSC-CM.

Molecular and Cellular characterization of developing Fragile X Synapses in human assembloids

Fragile X syndrome is a condition that affects the development of the nervous system. It is a leading cause of autism, a prevalent neurodevelopmental condition that is currently untreatable. Fragile X animal models display deficits at the level of neuronal connections called synapses. In addition, other cell types are affected including astrocytes. Astrocytes are glial cells important for proper neuronal connectivity and function.

Establishment and validation of a human in vitro model to investigate uptake transport at the Blood-Brain Barrier

Establishment and validation of a human in vitro model to investigate uptake transport at the Blood-Brain Barrier

The Blood-Brain Barrier is a structure between the central nervous system (CNS) and the bloodstream, whose main role is to protect the CNS from toxic compounds while allowing the passage of nutrients. Importantly, due to the activity of drug efflux transporters the Blood-Brain Barrier is seen as an obstacle for brain targeting drugs. This mechanistic understanding mostly relies on data from rodents, as it is difficult to measure and collect data on drug accumulation in the brain in humans.

Artificial intelligence-mediated drug synergy prediction and validation in patient-derived ex vivo tumor organoid models

Artificial intelligence-mediated drug synergy prediction and validation in patient-derived ex vivo tumor organoid models

In precision oncology, single drug treatment often leads to acquired resistance and tumor relapse. Novel drugs to overcome resistance are in development. Unfortunately, there is a substantial number of animals used, costs involved and high failure rates in the development of new drugs. Drug repurposing is increasingly becoming an attractive proposition because it involves ready to use compounds. Over the past decades we learned that the combination of multiple drugs can increase drug efficacy and reduce the development of drug resistance.

3Rs PROJECT GRANTS

Cre-Rux – improving mouse well-being with a refined approach for in vivo genetic manipulation

Biomedical research relies on genetic manipulation of animals, particularly mice, as experimental models to mimic human diseases and study their mechanisms. A widely used system relies on the use of the enzyme Cre recombinase. A variant of this enzyme, CreERT2, needs the drug tamoxifen to be active. However, it is increasingly apparent that tamoxifen administration can be problematic. Reports show that tamoxifen administration can be toxic in mice.

Preventing the use of pregnant horses to produce PMSG by using immortalized chorionic girdle cells for the hormone production

Preventing the use of pregnant horses to produce PMSG by using immortalized chorionic girdle cells for the hormone production

Derived from the blood of pregnant horses, “pregnant mare serum gonadotropin (PMSG)”, is a hormone frequently used in farming and the breeding of mice and rats with specific genetic mutations. It is used in starting and synchronising the ovulation cyclies of of pigs, cattle and goats. In mice, the hormone is used to cause the release of an exceptional amount of egg cells at one time. It is currently isolated exclusively from live pregnant horses, and it has been reported that from these pregnant “production” mares up to 10 litres of blood are taken weekly until around 4 months of pregnancy.

3D-printed mouse tail models for intravenous injection training

3D-printed mouse tail models for intravenous injection training

To perform i.v. injections on mice reliably, extensive training is required. This is usually performed on live animals.
For the first steps of training (handling of syringes and the tail), our 3D-printed mouse tail models can be useful placeholders instead of using live animals. Conception, prototyping and first testing of 3D-printed mouse tail models is already accomplished. Tail models should be manufactured in larger quantities and distributed among researchers / trainers. Detailed user experience data should be collected to optimize the tail models and confirm their usefulness. Publishing this data should increase acceptance and use of the tail models.

Automation, Optimisation and Dissemination of the Mouse Grimace Scale

Automation, Optimisation and Dissemination of the Mouse Grimace Scale

We will develop, refine, and optimize a new setup that will enable labs all over the world to use the mouse grimace scale to accurately, easily and reliably assess pain in rodents. We will apply cutting-edge machine vision/learning technology to ensure the data collected is of the highest quality. We will collaborate with other labs to directly test the ease of use and transferability of the new setup and aim to increase the reliability and reproducibility of animal welfare monitoring in rodents worldwide

Best practice guidance for including sex as a biological variable in animal research

Best practice guidance for including sex as a biological variable in animal research

In animal research, a strong bias towards using male animals is apparent in most disciplines. By using animals of only one sex, researchers risk missing important sex differences and using animals for inconclusive findings. In response to such overt sex bias, major funders now request inclusion of sex as a biological variable in all animal experiments. However, this poses challenges to the 3Rs: experiments may require up to twice as many animals and researchers face difficult logistical decisions with important implications for both animal welfare and scientific validity.

Experimental toolkit to evaluate cell-based therapies in the mouse brain

Experimental toolkit to evaluate cell-based therapies in the mouse brain

For every 100 prospective therapies in clinical development, approximately 90 are never approved for clinical use. This unsatisfactory rate is especially high in the field of neurosciences, revealing the complex biology of the human brain and the necessity for improved preclinical validation of experimental treatments. Recent advances in stem cell biology and genetic engineering have caused cell therapies to become an emerging treatment paradigm for patients with permanent neurologic deficits (e.g. after a stroke).

Refining intracerebral administration of drugs with sonoporation-activated microbubbles

Intracerebral administration of central nervous system (CNS) active agents through intracranial surgery is a widely used procedure in modern neuroscience. The discovery of new therapeutic treatment options for CNS diseases or the use of viruses to study the molecular and cellular functions of a gene within an identified cell type in the brain, mainly explain why such a methodology is popular among neuroscientists. Indeed, the range of molecules entering the brain parenchyma is greatly limited by the blood-brain barrier (BBB).

Identifying new regulators of cell invasion in colorectal cancer using the Drosophila adult intestine

Identifying new regulators of cell invasion in colorectal cancer using the Drosophila adult intestine

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a cancer of the colon and the rectum. It is the third most prevalent cancer worldwide and is the fourth most common cause of cancer-related deaths. If the cancer is localized, the five-year survival rate is 90%; if the cancer has spread – metastasized – the five-year survival rate drops to 14%. Consequently, it is crucial to understand how CRC cells adopt a metastatic fate.

Reducing the need for lethal health monitoring in trout

Reducing the need for lethal health monitoring in trout

Proliferative Kidney Disease (PKD) is a deadly parasitic fish disease that is classified as reportable and that has to be monitored in Switzerland. For this purpose, 15’500 potentially healthy pre-reproductive brown trout were electrofished and euthanized since 2000 to determine their PKD status by the applicant at the Centre for Fish and Wildlife Health (FIWI) alone.

Engineering a novel cell-based model for assessing materno-fetal drug transfer during pregnancy

Engineering a novel cell-based model for assessing materno-fetal drug transfer during pregnancy

The human placenta is a vital organ that acts as a barrier between the circulation of the mother and the growing fetus. It represents the interface between specialized placental cells called trophoblasts and fetal endothelial cells of the micro-vessels. Together these two tightly polarized cell layers perform crucial functions such as nutrient transport to the fetus or production of hormones.

Development of a platform for GU cancer patient-derived organoids

Development of a platform for GU cancer patient-derived organoids

Understanding and overcoming cancer therapy resistance is a major overarching goal of our precision oncology program at the University of Bern. One of the greatest hurdles is the lack of reliable model systems to untangle resistance on a patient to patient basis. Animal models have been widely used to test highly focused questions in oncology and tumor resistance. However, to answer specific questions on a patient-specific basis animal models are not ideal, mostly because experiments are time consuming and incompatible with high-throughput screening.

IPF-on-Chip: Replacing the bleomycin induced lung injury and fibrosis model with lung-on-chip technology

IPF-on-Chip: Replacing the bleomycin induced lung injury and fibrosis model with lung-on-chip technology

Today, new antifibrotic drugs for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) are tested in mice with the bleomycin-induced lung-injury and lung fibrosis model. Nevertheless, the resulting fibrotic lung of rodents is different from the fibrotic lung of IPF patients. Therefore, many drug candidates successful in the bleomycin model often fail in later clinical trials. The reasons for this are interspecies differences and difference between IPF, which is slow and irreversible in humans compared to the sharp and acute effect of the bleomycin injury to the mouse lung.

BEHAVE: A toolkit for deep-behavior profiling of laboratory rodents

BEHAVE: A toolkit for deep-behavior profiling of laboratory rodents

Many hundred-thousand rodents, mostly mice, are used in behavioural neuroscience research every year. This is necessary, because behaviour is the ultimate readout for brain function in health and disease, and developing treatments for brain disorders requires proof that behavioural disturbances can be corrected.

Nutritional requirements of fish cell lines – development of a serum-free culture medium (L-15Plus)

Nutritional requirements of fish cell lines – development of a serum-free culture medium (L-15Plus)

Manmade chemicals have become an essential commodity in our daily lives, from personal care to medicine and agriculture. Regulators require companies to conduct safety testing because, despite their benefits, such chemicals may also pose risks to human and environmental health. Environmental risk assessments still heavily rely on tests with fish. To replace such fish tests, we are developing strategies and assay procedures based on permanent fish cell lines of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), a key species for environmental protection.

Rodents have a right to best surgical practice

Rodents have a right to best surgical practice

Surgery is an integral part of many experimental animal studies. Anaesthesia and analgesia protocols are obvious targets for refinement. Good surgical practice, however, is often neglected. Performing surgery fast, minimally invasive and with optimal peri-and post-operative care helps reduce animal suffering, enables faster recovery with fewer complications and improves the reproducibility of study results.

Recombinant laminin-like proteins for organoid cultures free of animal-derived basement membrane extract 

Recombinant laminin-like proteins for organoid cultures free of animal-derived basement membrane extract 

Organoids are miniature organs generated from stem cells that provide unique in vitro models of organs in health and disease, and hold promises for personalized medicine and tissue engineering. They alleviate the need for animal experiments, as they enable the study of biomedical questions directly in vitro. They have become a cornerstone of 21st century biomedical research, and they still constitute a fast-developing field. In many cases, the tissue responsible for the organ-specific function – the parenchyma – is an epithelium, supported by a specialized matrix called a basement membrane.

Breeding management software for genetically modified rodents 

Breeding management software for genetically modified rodents 

Scientists frequently use genetically modified animals in basic and applied research. They often combine multiple genetic modifications requiring complex breeding schemes. Some of the surplus animals that do not carry the required traits cannot be used for research or further breeding and are usually euthanized. Such supernumerary animals cannot be entirely prevented, but their numbers must be kept to the minimum possible. Therefore, we aim to optimise breeding strategies for complex genetic models, which is not possible manually.

3D heart models for cardiac surgery training 

3D heart models for cardiac surgery training 

Surgery training on live animals is a controversial subject. While prohibited in Switzerland, surgical training on live animals is performed in many other countries. Several scientific publications as well as organisers of workshops open to a large audience of surgeons support this practice. Our goal is to develop a realistic and cost-effective alternative to the use of live animals for cardiovascular training. 

Using organoids to move towards personalised medicine

Using organoids to move towards personalised medicine

Dr. Yazici’s research focuses on developing organoids (lab grown tissue that mimics specific organs in structure and function) derived from human stem cells. Stem cells are cells that have the unique ability to develop into various specialised cell types.

3Rs at the Pint of Science

3Rs at the Pint of Science

The Pint of Science has had huge success in reaching the public with science for many years and we were delighted to host evenings of the 3Rs presentations and discussion in Bern and Geneva in May 2025.

3Rs SUPPORT GRANT

3Rs SUPPORT GRANT

Supporting ongoing research activities relevant to the 3Rs. Increasing 3Rs implementation, education and/or communication. Grants here are generally expected to be maximum CHF 20’000.- and as such function to enhance or implement 3Rs activities. This scheme replaces the previous Refinement Grant, without the strict focus and potential 3Rs-classification issues we’ve encountered. Next call likely to be 2026, or late 2025.

Refinement Grants

Targeted Call 2023

Advancing responsibility: Reducing Surplus Animals and Promoting Change

Animal Use in Swiss Science: A look at Severity

Animal Use in Swiss Science: A look at Severity

To improve animal welfare in Switzerland, we need to understand not only how many animals and which species are used but also how they are used. By analysing 27 years of publicly available data, this report examines trends in the number of animal uses and their severity classification.

Nominations for the 3Rs Awards open on February 1st

The main 3Rs Award of CHF 4’000.- is given for exceptional work that has made a significant contribution to the Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement of animal experimentation (the 3Rs Principle).

A further CHF 2500.- prize, the Young 3Rs Investigator Award, is given to two researchers in the early stages of their careers for their individual achievements advancing the 3Rs principle and is co-funded by the NRP 79.

Open Funding Opportunities

Open Funding Opportunities

Swiss 3RCC Funding Opportunities: Now Accepting Applications

Swiss 3RCC is pleased to announce its funding schemes for the 2025–2028 period. These grants aim to advance the principles of the 3Rs (Replacement, Reduction, Refinement) through innovative research.

Culture of Care Award 2024

The award goes to Dr. Petra Seebeck (University of Zurich) & Dr. Stephan Zeiter (AO Research Institute Davos) for their pioneering initiative in promoting Good Surgical Practice in rodent surgery.

The 3Rs meet Improvised Theatre!

The 3Rs are a fundamental principle for professionals working in science with animals, yet outside the research community, they remain relatively unknown. For the 3RCC, outreach is imperative—not only to highlight the importance of animals in research but also to showcase the continuous progress being made to Replace and Reduce animals in science, and to Refine their use. With this goal in mind, and on a chilly Saturday night in November, the 3RCC brought the 3Rs to a packed audience at CatCave9, a monthly improv show.

Viola Bugada – Young 3Rs Investigator 2023

Viola Bugada – Young 3Rs Investigator 2023

Viola Bugada (Institute of Experimental Immunology, UZH) receives the Young 3Rs Investigator Award for her contribution to refining oral drug administration to rodents.

Results of 2023 Targeted Call

Two pioneering research projects will be funded under the Targeted Call 2023 funding scheme to advance responsibility by reducing surplus animals and promoting change.

3Rs Awards 2023

The Swiss 3RCC has announced the recipients of the 2023 3Rs award and the Young 3Rs Investigator Award.

Annual Report 2023

Annual Report 2023

The Swiss 3Rs Competence Centre (3RCC) continues to drive progress in the implementation of the...

Results of 2022 Targeted Call

The 3RCC will fund five research projects spanning different focuses within the 3Rs (replacement, reduction, refinement) at Swiss research institutions with a total of CHF 1,855,623.

Dr. Wei Wei – Young 3Rs Investigator 2022

Dr. Wei Wei – Young 3Rs Investigator 2022

The 3Rs Young Investigators Award 2022 goes to Wei Wei from ETH Zürich for his work on creating a three-dimensional model of the brain’s protective wall, the blood-brain-barrier.

Prof. Guillaume Andrey – 2022 3Rs Award

Prof. Guillaume Andrey – 2022 3Rs Award

The 3Rs Award 2022 goes to Prof. Guillaume Andrey from the University of Geneva for his work to reduce the use of transgenic animals in developmental studies.

Annual Report 2022

Annual Report 2022

This report highlights the remarkable progress made by the Centre in the past year towards its...

3Rs SUPPORT GRANT

Multicenter Survey on Tunnel Handling

This project gathered data from semi-structured interviews to four animal facility managers with some pilot experience on tunnel handling within their facilities, and from 20 animal caretakers who have experienced tunnel handling.

TUNNEL HANDLING: Introduction and practical advice

TUNNEL HANDLING: Introduction and practical advice

This video is a lay introduction by Prof. Paulin Jirkof from the University of Zürich to Tunnel Handling, a non-aversive way to handle laboratory animals developed by Prof. Jane Hurst from the University of Liverpool.

Bernhard Voelkl – 2021 3Rs Award

Bernhard Voelkl – 2021 3Rs Award

The 2021 3Rs Award goes to Bernhard Voelkl from the Vetsuisse Faculty of the University of Bern for his work improving better design of animal studies.

Annual Report 2021

Annual Report 2021

2021 was an important year for the 3RCC as it was the first of a new funding period stretching to...

Animals in Swiss Science

Animals in Swiss Science

A breakdown and analysis of expired animal experimentation licenses in Switzerland

A no-stress alternative to oral gavage in mice

Non-Aversive Handling Survey

Mice have been, and remain the most commonly used animal in scientific research in most of the world, including in Switzerland (according to both the annual statistics on animal use in Switzerland, and the Swiss 3RCC’s own report on animal use in experimentation). Not counted in those statistics is the number of mice which are only included in breeding programs, or simply do not take part in a licensed animal experimentation for other reasons. 

Annual Report 2018-2020

Annual Report 2018-2020

The Swiss education and research landscape is complex and multifaceted, as is the implementation...