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Research and Development Service - VA Portland HCS

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Research & Development - Committees and Subcommittees

  • R&DC
  • HSR Committee
  • IACUC
  • IRB
  • SRS

Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee (IACUC)


Guidelines
Forms
Alternatives for Animal Use
IACUC Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) (185KB, PDF)
Reporting Animal Welfare Concerns

If you have questions regarding the
IACUC, contact:

Sarah Fiedler
IACUC Coordinator
Research & Development Service
Building 101 / Room 502C
503-220-8262 x55520
sarah.fiedler@va.gov
PVAMC-IACUC@va.gov


The Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center recognizes the vital importance that animals fulfill in research. VAPORHCS is bound by federal mandates, namely the Animal Welfare Act, (Federal Web Site) the Public Health Service Policy, (Federal Web Site) and the Department of Veterans Affairs, to maintain an oversight committee (IACUC) that reviews and regulates the use of animals for biomedical research and teaching.

As part of quality assurance and a high standard of care, the IACUC follows the guidelines of the Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW) (Federal Web Site) and sets its policies according to the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (non-Federal Web Site) and the Department of Veterans Affairs Handbook 1200.07, Use of Animals in Research (VA Web Site, PDF).

The Veterinary Medical Unit, with which the IACUC works closely, is fully accredited from the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC) (non-Federal Web Site) and has letters of assurance on file with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (Federal Web Site) and the OLAW.

The IACUC routinely evaluates the Veterinary Medical Unit facilities to assure compliance with federal, state, and local laws.


Guidelines

The IACUC has developed the following Guidelines to help investigators in project development:

Use of Adjuvants (29KB, MSWord)
Use of Anesthetics and Analgesics (94KB, MSWord)
Blood Collection (29KB, MSWord)
Daily Observation of Animals (26KB, MSWord)
Death as an Endpoint (28KB, MSWord)
EAE Studies (27KB, MSWord)
Use of Paralytic Agents (27KB, MSWord)
Stabilization of Animals After Transport (27KB, MSWord)
Survival Rodent Surgery (35KB, MSWord)
Tissue Collection for Genotyping (38KB, MSWord)
Tumor Development (26KB, MSWord)

IACUC Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) (185KB, PDF)

Principal Investigators: you must report events identified in VHA Directive 1058, Research Compliance Reporting Requirements, to the ACOS/R&D and to the IACUC by deadlines specified in VHA Directive 1058.

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Forms

Animal Component of Research Protocol (ACORP)
The ACORP should be completed when a VA PI is submitting a study/grant which uses animals AND requests VA funds (i.e., Merit Review, Career Development) AND/OR the VA PI wishes to house the animals at the VA Portland Health Care System's Veterinary Medical Unit (VMU). Visit the VA Office of R&D Animal Documents and Resources web page for further information.

Deadline for consideration at the next meeting is the 15th of the month (or the next business day).

Note: VA Central Office expects a detailed literature search of alternatives to animal testing with the ACORP submission. See the following document for details:
Database Searches for Alternatives to Animal Testing (34KB, MSWord)

PLEASE NOTE: Effective June 30, 2021, all initial submissions, continuing reviews and amendments must be submitted through VAIRRS. Forms can be found within VAIRRS under Forms and Templates, then from the drop-down menu VA Portland IACUC, Portland, OR - Documents for Researchers as well as under VHA ORPP&E, Washington, DC - Documents for Animal Researchers.

Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)
These Standard Operating Procedures have been approved by the IACUC and may be referenced in your ACORP. If you intend to reference any of these SOPs in your animal protocol, please add a statement in Item C.2. that you have read and understand the guidelines in the SOP and that you will follow the procedure outlined. To obtain a copy of these SOPs, please e-mail your request to PVAMC-IACUC@va.gov or contact the Veterinary Medical Officer.

Conditioned Place Preference (or Aversion) Testing
Drinking in the Dark
IVIS Spectrum CT Imager
Three-Day Locomotor Activity Test

Additionally, if you would like to propose that a new SOP be reviewed and approved by the IACUC, please contact Sarah Fiedler (sarah.fiedler@va.gov@va.gov) and Atheir Abbas (atheir.abbas@va.gov) for additional information.

 

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Alternatives to the Use of Animals in Research

The Animal Welfare Act Regulations, (Federal Web Site) Section 2.31 and USDA Policies require that a written narrative be provided by the Principal Investigator (PI) to determine whether or not alternatives exist to procedures which may cause pain or distress in animals used for teaching or research. In addition, if alternatives exist but are not used, the PI must justify why this is the case. Although searching for animal alternatives may seem to be an overwhelming task, it is hoped that the information in this document will assist animal users with this federally mandated task.

Definition of Alternatives
Alternatives refer to methods or approaches which result in refinement of procedures which lessen pain and/or distress; reduction in numbers of animals required; or replacement of animals with non-whole-animal systems or replacement of one animal species with another, particularly if the substituted species is non-mammalian or invertebrate.

Animal Welfare Act Regulations
The AWA regulations require the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) to determine that "the principal investigator has considered alternatives to procedures that may cause more than momentary or slight pain or distress to the animals and has provided a written narrative description of the methods and sources used to determine that alternatives were not available." The PI must provide scientific justification to the IACUC if alternatives are available but not used.

Types of Studies Requiring an Alternatives Search
Not all animal use protocols require an alternatives search. Only studies utilizing procedures which result in more than momentary or slight pain or distress require a search. Examples include: toxicity and infectious diseases research, tumor induction or transplantation studies, survival and non-survival surgical procedures, pain research, in vivo monoclonal or polyclonal antibody production procedures, fluid and/or food restriction, and prolonged restraint. This list is not exhaustive. If you are unsure whether a search is required, please consult the VAPORHCS IACUC.

Alternatives Narrative
The written narrative for the search for alternatives must include the following minimum: methods of searching, databases searched, the date of the search and years covered, and key words and/or search strategy used by the PI. If alternatives exist to the proposed animal procedures in the protocol, the PI must scientifically justify why these alternatives are not used. This information must be updated with each three-year renewal of the animal use protocol.

Database and Web Site Searching
Computerized storage of scientific information makes database searching relatively easy. Databases frequently used, and available on-line at UIUC, for alternatives searches include TOXLINE, GRATEFUL MED, Cancerlit, Bioethics, and AIDSLINE (National Library of Medicine), and CAB Abstracts and AGRICOLA. Depending on the subject, searching several of these databases for alternatives is considered adequate by the IACUC.

Problems often arise in choosing keywords and search strategies that will yield the most pertinent information. Appropriate search terms or keywords include animal testing alternatives, alternatives, tissue culture, cell culture, simulation, in vitro, and model. Additional keywords can be found on the UC Center for Animal Alternatives web page (see below). These terms are useful, but are not the only terminology possible. The following websites provide additional information PIs may find helpful in completing an alternatives search:

Searchable Databases and Web Resources:

Examples

  • Example #1: Intestinal Xenograft Model for Human Enterocytozoon bieneusi infection (infectious diseases study) (30KB, MSWord)
  • Example #2: Monoclonal Antibody Production (in vivo antibody production) (35KB, MSWord)
  • Example #3: Polyclonal Antibody Production (in vivo antibody production) (39KB, MSWord)

Reporting Animal Welfare Concerns

Animal Welfare concerns can be reported to:


Alternatively, concerns may be filed with the Office of Research Oversight:


VA Research Concerns - Office of Research Oversight

Concerns can also be reported anonymously by mail:

VA Portland Healthcare System

3710 US Veterans’ Hospital Rd.

R&D/ Attn: IACUC Coordinator

Portland, OR 97239

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