Rev. September 2009 UNCW Institutional Animal Care and Use Application to Use Live Vertebrate Animals in Research or Educational Programs For IACUC Use Only Protocol #: A 1112 - ________ Approval Date: _____________ Expiration Date: ____________ PART A: General Project Information 1. Project Title (use same title as grant proposal, if applicable): New Protocol 2. Project Support: OR Replacement for Protocol # Awarded Pending Grant*: Agency UNCW Grant # Proposal # *A copy of the grant proposal must be submitted Intramural Research Support: Submitted Approved: Date Departmental Support: Teaching Course Other: Specify 3. Estimated start date of project: 4. Estimated completion date of project: 5. Scientific and Technical Merit Review – Check only one. This study has undergone an extramural peer review for scientific and technical merit by the funding agency referenced above. This study has undergone a peer review for scientific and technical merit within UNCW. I selected appropriate peer reviewers who are knowledgeable in this area of research and qualified to conduct such a review. NOTE TO UNCW PEER REVIEWERS: By signing below you are certifying that 1) EXPIRATION DATE: you are appropriately qualified to conduct a peer review for scientific and technical merit for the type of research described in this protocol, and; 2) you are confident that the activities described in this protocol have scientific and technical merit. Peer Reviewer Printed Name Peer Reviewer Signature Date Reviewed 1. 2. FOR IACUC USE ONLY Full Board Decision: Approved Changes Required - Referred to DR Disapproved Date of Full Board Decision: Designated Review Decision: Approved Unable to Approve - Referred to Full Board Date of Designated Review: If applicable, revisions/clarifications received: IACUC Reviewer Signature: ___________________ Print Name: _______________________ IACUC Chair signs on behalf of Full Board unless IACUC Chair is PI. PART B: Confidential Project Information The information in this part is not subject to release under NC public records law and will be kept in a separate folder marked “confidential”. 1. Research Team Members Provide contact and training information for all research team members. If a team member is to be an emergency contact for the IACUC, please check the Emergency Contact box next to the person’s name. a. Principal Investigator (must be faculty member) Emergency Contact Name Title Department Phone # Email Online IACUC Training Date: Other experience/applicable training for this project (years of experience with species, etc.): b. Role Examples: Co-PI, Student Researcher (if student is primary researcher and PI is providing oversight only), Research Assistant Emergency Contact Name Title Department Phone # Email Online IACUC Training Date: Project responsibilities: List responsibilities and experience/applicable training for them, including hands-on training by PI or other qualified study personnel listed on this protocol: c. Role Emergency Contact Name Phone # Email Online IACUC Training Date: Project responsibilities: List responsibilities and experience/applicable training for them, including hands-on training by PI or other qualified study personnel listed on this protocol: d. Role Emergency Contact Name Phone # Email Online IACUC Training Date: Project responsibilities: List responsibilities and experience/applicable training for them, including hands-on training by PI or other qualified study personnel listed on this protocol: e. Role Emergency Contact Name Phone # Email Online IACUC Training Date: Project responsibilities: List responsibilities and experience/applicable training for them, including hands-on training by PI or other qualified study personnel listed on this protocol: Note - If additional space is needed, complete an Additional Personnel Appendix. This form can be found on the IACUC website: http://www.uncw.edu/orssp/conduct-animal-forms.html 2 2. Primary housing locations: Provide building and room number of facility. Animal facilities are subject to inspection twice per year. If animals will be housed anywhere else outside approved animal housing facility for more than 12 hours, provide location and justification. 3. Locations where experiments and any other activities will be conducted: Provide building and room number of facility. If animals in the wild will be used, state the location of the field study and describe if the study will involve observation or interaction. As appropriate, describe the observation method, type of interaction, whether the animals will be disturbed or affected, and any special procedures anticipated. If federal or regional permits are required, respond to PART D. #3b below and attach copies of permits. 4. Public Disclosure: Does this protocol describe any unpublished techniques, procedures or data for which copyright or patent may be sought, or the disclosure of which would place your research effort at a competitive disadvantage? Yes No If yes,indicate below the protocol section number(s) you wish to be considered for exemption from disclosure. 5. Signatures and Certifications: a. I hereby apply for a three-year protocol approval (with annual review required at the end of the first and second years) for the project described below, and assume responsibility for the animal care and use associated with this research. b. I understand the requirements of the PHS Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, applicable USDA regulations if any, and UNCW policies governing the use of vertebrate animals for research, testing, teaching or demonstration purposes. My signature certifies that I will conduct the project in full compliance with the aforementioned requirements. c. I certify that the activities listed in this protocol do not unnecessarily duplicate previous experiments. d. I certify that all personnel involved in the animal care, treatment and use aspects of this protocol are, or will be, adequately trained prior to participation in this study. e. I certify that I will obtain approval from the IACUC before initiating any changes to the study. f. I certify that I have contacted the UNCW Environmental Health and Safety Office for any applicable laboratory or other safety training for myself and/or my research team members, and have obtained the required EH&S approval for any activities that involve hazards materials, such as radio nuclides, biological agents, hazardous chemicals or drugs, or recombinant DNA. g. I certify that I will notify the IACUC regarding any unexpected study results that impact the animals. Any unanticipated pain or distress, morbidity or mortality will be reported to the attending veterinarian and the IACUC. Principal Investigator: __________________________________ Signature End of confidential section. 3 ________________ Date UNCW Institutional Animal Care and Use Application to Use Live Vertebrate Animals in Research or Educational Programs For IACUC Use Only Protocol #: A 1112- ______ Approval Date: __________ Expiration Date: __________ Project Title: PART C: LAY SUMMARY Under each question below, write a brief summary of the research (250-300 words) as if it were a newspaper article. Use general terms so that a well-educated lay non-scientist can understand the nature of the proposed work. Medical and technical terms and phrases should be defined in lay terms to the extent possible. 1. What are you trying to find out? Why is it important to know this (what is benefit)? 2. What will you do with the animals? (Include common name for animal and describe all interactions with animal.) 3. Why is this type of animal needed? PART D: TECHINCAL METHODS AND PROCEDURES 1. State the scientific aims of the study and/or hypotheses to be tested: 2. Experimental Design and Methods: Describe the experimental groups and outline the procedures involving live animals that will be used to accomplish the specific aims of the study. Surgical details need not be described here. If performing surgery, attach a Surgery Appendix (see PART E of this form). Procedures performed on tissues removed from animals need not be described in detail. 3. Technical Species Description and Information Please note - IACUC protocols may be approved for up to 3 years, with annual reviews required after years 1 and 2. Provide number of animals needed for each year. Updates will be requested during annual reviews of the project. A Pain Category chart follows for your reference. Species Pain Estimated Number of Animals Identification Source of Animal Category* Needed Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total 4 Totals Notes or Clarifications Regarding the Above Chart (Optional): a. Approximately how many animals do you expect to house on any given day? b. Is any species listed above endangered or protected? Yes No If yes, explain below: c. Do you need any special permits or licenses to capture any species listed above? Yes No If yes, explain below: If permit is needed: By checking this box the principal investigator certifies that neither s/he nor any member of the research team will conduct any of the activities described in this protocol without first obtaining the necessary permits. * For Reference - - - Pain Categories and Examples Classification B: Animals being bred, conditioned, or held for use in teaching, testing, experiments, research, or surgery, but not yet used for such purposes. Examples include: breeding colonies; newly acquired animals; animals held under proper captive conditions; wild animals that are being observed. Classification C: Animals upon which teaching, research, experiments, or tests will be conducted involving no pain, distress, or use of painrelieving drugs. Examples include: routine examinations; blood sampling; injection of non-toxic materials; approved methods of euthanasia that induce rapid unconsciousness; short periods (up to 24 hours) of withholding food and water. Attach Pain and Distress Appendix to this application for D & E Classifications (See PART E of this form) Classification D: Animals upon which experiments, teaching, research, surgery, or tests will be conducted involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals and for which appropriate anesthetic, analgesic, or tranquilizing drugs will be used. Examples include: terminal surgery, as well as recovery surgery and procedures performed under anesthesia. Also included are 5 behavioral studies on restrained animals; studies using noxious stimuli from which escape is possible; use of Freund's complete adjuvant; experiments involving predator-prey interactions. Also included are studies in which diseases or toxicities are induced and the animals are expected to become sick or abnormal. Animals in Type D studies may experience pain/stress/discomfort, but the necessary treatments to alleviate the symptoms are available and provided, or the animals are euthanized. Classification E: Animals upon which teaching, experiments, research, surgery, or tests will be conducted involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals and for which the use of appropriate anesthetic, analgesic, or tranquilizing drugs will adversely affect the procedures, results, or interpretation of the teaching, research, experiments, surgery, or tests. Examples include: studies of acute and chronic pain; application of noxious stimuli from which escape is impossible; the use of muscle relaxants in surgery without concurrent use of anesthetics; studies where death is the end-point, i.e. diseases are induced and infected animals are permitted to succumb rather than treated or euthanized. 4. Justifications: a. Number of Animals Explain why the number requested above is the minimum number of animals you can use to achieve valid results either by providing journal citations in which a similar number of animals have been used for the specific type of research proposed, or by including a suitable power calculation below. If you are unable to provide one or the other, explain why. b. Alternatives Explain how you have investigated alternatives to animal use and why alternatives are not appropriate. List websites checked (such as Alt.web- http://altweb.jhsph.edu/ or the Animal Welfare Information Center - http://www.nal.usda.gov/awic/). c. Refinement of Procedures Explain how procedures have been refined so as to eliminate or reduce unnecessary pain and distress in animals. 5. Transport of animals: If you will transport animals between locations, describe containment method and what safety precautions are in place for the animals and staff during transport. 6. Staff Safety: Please check any safety issues that personnel may encounter in performing the research activities or husbandry responsibilities. NOTE: By checking a box the PI certifies that staff has been appropriately trained on minimizing the risk of injury. Safety Issue: Back injury (from lifting cages/ feedbags) - Train on proper lifting procedures Slip/fall injuries (wet floors/boats) 6 - Train on proper shoes to wear in lab/on boats - Train on proper lab maintenance procedures to avoid wet floors Bites (from handling animals) - Train on proper handling procedures - Provide protective gloves or other gear Needle stick - Train on proper sharps disposal - Provide protective gloves or other gear Burns (washing cages, chemical burns) - Train on proper use of hot water/steam cleaner - Protective gear Eye injuries (from bedding particles, UV lights, chemicals) - Provide goggles - Train on proper use of eyewash station - Periodic inspection of eyewash station (operational?) Allergens (from animal hair, serum, animal proteins) - Protective garments - Fit-test for respirator Other exposures (biohazard, chemical, radiation) - UNCW Environmental Health and Safety training No safety issues identified 7. Special Concerns: List any special concerns or requirements pertaining to special housing needs, equipment, or animal care, etc. 8. Disposition of Animals: a. Euthanasia i. Method - must be consistent with the recommendations of the June 2007 AVMA Guidelines on Euthanasia http://www.avma.org/issues/animal_welfare/euthanasia.pdf. Provide a detailed justification if the method is not recommended by the AVMA. ii. Confirmation of Death - describe how death will be confirmed. Note: any instances of unsuccessful euthanasia must be reported to the IACUC immediately. iii. Disposal – describe method of disposal. b. Other i. Describe if animals will be released, returned to pet store or other method of disposition. ii. In the event a distressed animal cannot be released as stated above and requires euthanasia, please state the method that will be used. This must be consistent with the recommendations of the June 7 2007 AVMA Guidelines on Euthanasia http://www.avma.org/issues/animal_welfare/euthanasia.pdf Provide a detailed justification if the method is not recommended by the AVMA. PART E: SPECIAL CONDITIONS APPENDICES Yes No Are additional personnel on the research team? If yes, attach an Additional Personnel Appendix. Yes No Will any drugs be administered to the animals? If yes, attach a Drug Administration Appendix. Yes No Will animals be subjected to more than momentary or slight pain or distress? Will there be prolonged restraint of an unanesthetized animal? If yes to any, attach a Pain and/or Distress Appendix. Yes No Will animal diets be restricted or manipulated for more than 24 hours? If yes, attach a Diet Manipulation Appendix. Yes No Are surgical procedures planned? If yes, attach a Surgery Appendix. Please submit one original, signed hard copy and one electronic copy of this form to Angela Pennell Kelly in the Office of Research Services and Sponsored Programs (hard copy to Hoggard Hall, Room 174 or Campus Mail Box 5973, electronic copy to kellya@uncw.edu). 8