How to Write an Animal Care and Use Protocol - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

How to Write an Animal Care and Use Protocol

Description:

... Public Health Services (PHS), NIH, Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW) ... Relevant to human/animal health or basic knowledge. Proper species and numbers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:85
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: dav5229
Category:
Tags: animal | care | protocol | use | write

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: How to Write an Animal Care and Use Protocol


1
How to Write an Animal Care and Use Protocol
  • David Lyons, Ph.D.
  • Asst. Dir. Animal Care and Use

2
(No Transcript)
3
Why Animal Welfare?
  • To protect creatures who cannot speak for
    themselves
  • To uphold community standards
  • For the best science

4
Where do you stand?
5
1960s The Animal Welfare Act (AWA)
Life Magazine, 1966
Pictures Talk
6
AWA Protections for pets and more
MED SCHOOL ESCAPE. He Has no fancy bloodlines,
but to the Thomas Connolys of New- ton, Mass.
Lancer is the family pooch. The dog was picked
up and impounded one day after delivering the
Connolly children to school. After 10 das he was
sold to Harvard Medical School.
7
National Oversight
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
    Public Health Services (PHS), NIH, Office of
    Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW)
  • Association for the Assessment and Accreditation
    of Laboratory Animal Care International (AAALAC)

8
Morphed into MMORP (Massively Multi-player Online
Role Playing)
9
Regulatory Structure Alphabet Soup
10
The Guide
  • Primary How to book for animal research

11
U.S. Government Principles for the Utilization
and Care of Vertebrate Animals Used in Testing,
Research, and Training
  • Proper transport
  • Relevant to human/animal health or basic
    knowledge
  • Proper species and numbers
  • Avoidance of pain and distress
  • Proper analgesics and anesthetics
  • Painless death
  • Proper husbandry
  • Proper training of researchers
  • Exceptions approved by IACUC, rather than
    researcher

12
3-Rs
  • Reduce the number of animals being tested
  • Refine the methodology used, this implies the
    notion of end-points
  • Replace the animal models

13
1-5. Header items
  • 1. Contact Info
  • 2. Title New or Replacement
  • 3. Project Support Federal Grant, Industry
    project, in-house funding
  • 4. External Scientific Review
  • 5. Internal Scientific Review

14
6. Training and 7. Occupational Health Program
  • 6. PI and those who touch animals
  • Trained for species
  • Trained for procedure
  • Occ Hlth Pgm by species
  • 7. For those who handle tissues and samples only
  • Occ Hlth Pgm

15
8. Lay Summary and 9. Specific Aims
  • 8. Write Lay Summary in 200 words or fewer for an
    8th grade audience. Used by
  • the lay committee member during review
  • Public Relations for talking points to the media
  • 9. Specific Aims Helps orient reviewer

16
10. Design and Grant Pages
  • 10. Simple description of experimental design
  • Basic details of animal expts
  • Clearly show the role for each experimental group
    of animals and the number of animals in each
    group
  • Be concise and complete
  • Use bullets, tables, short-hand, etc. to get to
    the point fast
  • Must provide grant pages Key pieces of Research
    Plan and Vertebrate Animal section
  • ACUC must approve transport through public areas

17
11. A-B Animal Use
  • 11.A. Animal Transfers
  • 11.B Animal Table
  • Breakdown by Group
  • Show animal transfers
  • Special cases
  • Replacement protocols Remove animals already
    used and killed transfer animals in house
  • Breeding colonies Include breeders, animals
    culled but not used as experimental subjects,
    include culled preweanling animals
  • Pain/Distress categories
  • C, D, E Watched carefully by the USDA

18
11.C. Preweanling animals
  • Important for breeding colonies

19
11.D. Animal Rationale and Species
  • Why must animals be used?
  • Bad Answers
  • cuz I can
  • cuz I always have before
  • cuz its all that I can afford
  • Good Answers
  • The science requires an intact animal
  • No other means are available
  • Why this species?
  • Good Answers
  • It is the next natural step to goal
  • It is the best model

20
11.E. Animal number justification
  • Do
  • Power Calculations
  • Cite similar studies
  • Note pilot work
  • Dont
  • Base it on your years of experience
  • Replicate experiments already justified by power
    analysis (except in rare cases)

21
11.F. Animal Study Areas
  • Non-ARP space where live animals are used
  • ACUC must visit

22
12.1-3 Drug Tables
  • 12.1 Anesthetic drugs
  • Additional intra-operative monitoring required
    when paralytics are used
  • 12.2 Analgesic drugs
  • Indicate analgesic/euthanasia to guide emergency
    care
  • 12.3 ALL other agents (drugs, biologicals,
    etc.)
  • RESOURCE Drug formulary by species on ARP web
    site

23
13. Dietary Manipulations
  • Important to USDA
  • Food and Water restriction policies require
    specific documentation
  • Body weight
  • Actual daily food and water intake

24
14. Surgical Procedures -Key Concepts I
  • Survival vs. Non-survival
  • Animals awake after survival procedure
  • Major vs. Minor
  • Major surgery enters a body cavity or produces
    permanent impairment
  • Single vs. Multiple
  • MMSS must be approved by IACUC
  • USDA must approve MMSS in second protocol

25
14. Surgical Procedures -Key Concepts II
  • USDA-regulated animals vs. Mice, rats birds
  • Unique facility regs for operative areas
  • Peri-operative procedures
  • Pre-operative analgesics
  • Intra-operative monitoring
  • Post-operative care Documenting stages of
    recovery and pain management
  • 15. Non-surgical anesthesia

26
14. 15. Stumpers
  • Frequency of animal monitoring
  • Magic words are on protocol form Post-surgical
    monitoring of animals should occur every 30
    minutes throughout stage 4 of recovery, 6-10
    hours throughout stage 3, and then daily.
  • Signs of distress monitored
  • Be specific
  • Use signs of pain noted in ACUC policies
  • Demonstrate thoughtful preparation for pain
    management by setting clear triggers

27
16. Pain/Distress
  • If an animal in this study were not anesthetized,
    would the animal feel more than momentary or
    slight pain or distress if exposed to the
    procedures proposed in the protocol?
  • Will the animal experience unrelieved pain as
    part of the study?
  • If yes, the rationale must be well documented.
    -Very important to the USDA.
  • Literature search required
  • Purpose of search is for alternatives to painful
    or distressing procedures
  • Examples
  • Replace surgical observation with MRI
  • Replace production of antibodies via ascites with
    in vitro production
  • Replace indwelling vascular catheter for HR/O2
    measurement with finger-tip pulse-oxymeter.

28
17. Prolonged restraint
  • Prolonged restraint vs. Restricted activity
  • Prolonged restraint More than 12 hours
  • AWA Exception
  • Example small cage size
  • Restricted activity partial immobilization for
    more that 20 minutes in awake animals
  • Must document behavioral methods of acclimation
  • Example NHP chair for behavioral studies
    requires training of animal

29
18. Criteria for removal
  • Demonstrate thoughtful preparation for excluding
    animals by setting clear triggers
  • Make reasonable effort to anticipate adverse
    events
  • Be specific, e.g., 25 loss of BW, hematocrit at
    40.
  • Removed animals do not return
  • Death is not a criteria for removal

30
19. Euthanasia
  • Describe for planned and unplanned
  • Comply with AVMA Report of 2000
  • CO2 in rodents requires secondary method

31
20. Animal Housing
  • Central vs. Satellite
  • Satellite is
  • the responsibility of PI
  • held to same standards as ARP
  • approved by the ACUC
  • inspected by ACUC prior to use

32
21. Hazardous Agents 22. RadioisotopesKey
Concepts
  • Bio v. Chem v. Rad
  • Biologicals DNA, cells lines, viral vectors,
    etc.
  • Must consider risk to public, researchers, animal
    care staff and animal populations
  • Cell lines must be tested for animal and human
    pathogens
  • May require separate approval from biosafety,
    chemical safety committee or Radionuclide in
    Live Animals form

33
23. Environmental Enrichment
  • Nonhuman Primates
  • Separate form with specific requirements
  • Single housing of any animal requires
    justification and plan for enrichment

34
24. Canines
  • Non-standard housing is AWA exception
  • Dogs must be exercised

35
25. Source of Animals
  • Non-commercial sources
  • Special procedures for procuring animals from
    other schools or research facilities
  • Transgenic animals
  • May have special needs
  • Breeding colonies
  • Makes special demands on researchers and ARP
  • Purpose of vet signature is related to source and
    housing of animals, NOT review of entire protocol

36
26. Signature Conflict of Interest Disclosure
  • PI signature
  • Personal financial relationship with research
    sponsor or personal financial interest in
    research outcome must be disclosed here and
    ultimately managed.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com