Scientists are creating artificial micro-humans that will eliminate the need for using animals in laboratory testing.
The artificial human machines, each the size of a microchip, will simulate the response of humans to substances inhaled, absorbed in the gut or circulated through the bloodstream.
Early versions comprising an artificial lung, liver, kidney, heart and gut are already being used to test cosmetics, chemicals and drugs, researchers said.
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"If our system is approved by the regulators, then it will close down most of the animal-testing laboratories worldwide," said Uwe Marx, a tissue engineer from Technische Universitat Berlin and founder of TissUse, a firm developing the technology.
Scientists are already using individual artificial organs such as hearts and livers to test products, but these cannot be used on their own and a second set of tests have to be conducted later on animals to prove that the substances are safe when put into a living body where organs interact.
However, substances often behave differently in animals and almost half of drugs that pass the animal tests later cause unforeseen side effects during human trials.
The new farms will eliminate such unsafe human drug trials, speed up the development of life-saving treatments and could one day be used to tailor medicine to individual patients, researchers said.