When is it required to submit an amendment to an existing protocol?
A Principal Investigator's (PI's) research plan may change and evolve while an approved study is in progress especially since protocols are often written and approved before the funding is obtained to commence work using animals. Public Health Service (PHS) Policy (IV,B,7) requires PIs to seek Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approval for significant protocol changes. The Animal Welfare Act Regulations (AWAR) (§2.31,c,7) have similar language. Here at NYU the Institutional Care and Use committee is referred to as the "University Animal Care & Use Committee" or UAWCBoth the AWAR and PHS Policy require that the UAWC review and approve proposed significant modifications to ongoing activities using animals prior to initiation. The AWAR (§2.31,d,l) state that the UAWC shall determine that the proposed activities or significant changes meet requirements which are detailed at §2.31,d,l,i-§2.31,d,l,xi. These requirements include addressing pain and distress, alternatives to painful procedures, animal housing and veterinary care, personnel training and qualifications, surgical standards, and appropriate euthanasia techniques. PHS Policy IV,C,l,a-IV,C,l,g) states that the UAWC should review the animal-related components and determine that the proposed research projects are in accordance with PHS Policy, the Animal Welfare Act, the Guide to the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, and the institution's Assurance with the National Institutes of Health/Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare using criteria similar to the AWAR unless acceptable justification for the departure is presented by the PI.
The protocol amendment process provides an opportunity for an investigator to refine his experiment and change an approved protocol at times other than when regularly scheduled continuing protocol reviews occur. From the PI's perspective the amendment process provides a relatively simple, straightforward, and timely method to make changes to a previously approved protocol, which facilitates research while keeping the UAWC apprised.
What
activities can be considered appropriate for an amendment?
The
UAWC is charged by the Federal and State Governments to consider its
regulatory responsibilities when considering the best methods for reviewing
proposed amendments (changes) to approved protocols. Whether the activity
proposed can be a simple amendment or requires a rewritten protocol with
regular UAWC review, depends upon whether the proposed change is considered
to be minor or significant. Thus, ALL substantive protocol changes must
be reviewed and approved by the UAWC, although less extensive changes
may utilize the amendment mechanism rather than necessitating a complete
rewrite of the protocol. An institution can permit alterations in administrative
information to be changed without UAWC review (e.g., electronic mail
address of the PI or a change in the funding agency).
The distinction between minor and major (significant) changes, involves assessing the potential or actual reduction in animal welfare and the change in the overall ethical cost-benefit ratio. In this view, the proposed amendment must be considered in conjunction with the original protocol to adequately determine if a significant change has been proposed. Protocol changes which are complex, or submissions of multiple sequential amendments to an existing protocol are not well suited to the amendment mechanism. If in doubt whether a proposed change is "significant" from the point of view of animal welfare, please call the University veterinarian or the Chair of the UAWC.
Examples of change in animal use procedures that could affect animal welfare and are generally considered to be major (significant), therefore warranting full UAWC review:
Note: Previously, a significant modification required a full rewrite of the protocol. The appendix method can now be used for major amendments, requiring only that the sections of the protocol document to be updated are noted on the form. Major revisions must still be reviewed by the full UAWC.
for UAWC review:Examples of changes considered to be minor and are generally well-suited to the amendment mechanism:
Note: The previously used Minor Amendment form has been replaced by the appendix method

