Office
of Research and Project Administration
SPONSORED PROGRAMS COMPLIANCE
3. Protection of Research Subjects (Human and Animal)
Administrative
Responsibilities/Issues:
Human Subjects
The Research Subjects Review
Board (RSRB) provides an excellent web site that details the institution's
procedures and policies that govern the use of research subjects. The web
site can be accessed at http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/rsrb.
The use of human subjects in research requires approval of protocols
and consent/assent forms by an Institutional Review Board (IRB),
either the UR's Research Subjects Review Board (RSRB) or the Western
Institutional Review Board (WIRB). The RSRB reviews all minimal risk
studies, studies that are Principal Investigator (PI) initiated,
foundation-funded studies, and all federally-funded studies. The
WIRB reviews all industry-sponsored, greater-than-minimal-risk studies.
After the protocol and informed consent form are reviewed and approved,
the IRB issues a letter of approval to the Principal Investigator.
Many departments/centers utilize an internal process to ensure comprehensive
scientific review and approval of protocols, budget review and approval,
approval by Division/Department Chairs regarding participation of
subinvestigators from other divisions/departments, approval of use
of a particular study population, and determination of qualifications/adequacy
of coordinator staff. There is then a departmental sign-off before
a protocol can be submitted to a review board. If this process is
used in your department, it is important to communicate information
to the RSRB staff regarding authorized departmental signatories who
are empowered to certify scientific review, so that review boards
do not accept protocols for review without departmental sanction.
Several funding agencies have implemented the "Just-In-Time (JIT)" human
subjects reviews for grants, which means that the principal investigator
may wait until after a proposal has been submitted but prior to award
issuance to submit a protocol, informed consent and other applicable
materials to the IRB for review and approval. Review the proposal
instructions from the funding agency to determine whether JIT is
applicable for that particular sponsor and proposal. If so, after
the approval is received from the IRB, the administrator or ORPA
then sends the signed approval to the funding agency. If the funding
agency does not use JIT, the IRB approval/pending letter and any
other sponsor- required, IRB-related materials must be included in
the proposal application to the agency. As a reminder, sponsors that
do permit JIT at the proposal stage will often award a project but
restrict its use until human subject approval has been received,
which can delay program activities. If the PI is submitting a progress
report, the face page must have a date: it cannot be pending human
subjects review.
- Education in Human Subjects
Research: RSRB provides NIH-required, general education in the protection
of human subjects, concluding with an open-book exam. The test must be
completed by anyone who is involved in the consent process, or whose
role is specified in the protocol (key personnel). When in doubt, have
the person complete the Human Subjects Protection Program (HSPP) test
rather than the Ethical Principles in Research Program (EPRP) test, so
that all personnel will be qualified for greater than minimal risk studies.
Call the RSRB Office at X3-4127 for a copy of the book and test or access
the RSRB web site for additional information at http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/rsrb.
- Although the RSRB instructions
indicate that the test should be returned to the Office for Human
Subjects Protection (OHSP), it is suggested to instruct staff to
return the completed test to the departmental administrator or research
coordinator. The test should be sent to OHSP with a note to request
that that administrator be copied on the approval letter, which states
that the test has been passed, and includes the assignment number.
Sponsors may ask for a copy of the actual letter as proof that research
personnel have taken the course/test and have satisfactorily passed
the examination. The HSPP or EPRP Number must be included on the
face page of the RSRB application form, for all key personnel, and
later in the document, for anyone else involved in the consent process.
-
Coordinator/PI Training: RSRB
offers a workshop geared to Coordinators and PI's to inform them of
their responsibilities regarding human subjects. Issues of personal
and UR liability are covered in this training.
-
All human subjects studies
must be reviewed by an IRB to determine the level of risk as well as
liability issues. RSRB may determine that some studies are exempt from
review. Nevertheless, all protocols with anything involving human subjects
must be submitted, even surveys and prior data or tissue studies.
-
Minimum Risk: A study is considered
of minimal risk when the subjects would encounter risks no greater
than they would in everyday situations (e.g. interviews) and usually
qualifies for expedited review by the IRB. All project personnel must
be trained to work with human subjects before approval to begin the
study will be given.
-
Investigator-initiated studies,
minimum risk sponsored studies, foundation-funded studies, and all
federally-funded studies are reviewed by UR's RSRB office. Industry-initiated
studies: Industry-initiated protocols are reviewed by the Western
Institutional Review Board (WIRB) in Olympia, Washington.
Animal Subjects
The University Committee on Animal Resources (UCAR) provides an excellent
web site that details the institutions procedures and policies that govern
animal research use. The web site can be accessed at http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/ucar.
Animal Subjects are safeguarded by the UR's University Committee on Animal
Resources (UCAR) office, which provides a regulatory role for the use of
animals in a sponsored research project. A protocol must be submitted to
UCAR for animal use in research. After the initial approval is received,
a UCAR letter of approval is issued for the animal subjects study.
- Animal Subjects Training:
Training should be coordinated with the UCAR and/or Vivarium
office. Classes are ½ day in length and must be attended by
all laboratory personnel that will work with animals.
- Just-In-Time (JIT) Approval:
Several agencies have implemented JIT for animal subjects reviews
for sponsored research projects. Basically, JIT means that PI's can
wait until after a proposal is submitted and prior to award issuance
to send a protocol to UCAR. Review the funding agency instructions
to determine whether JIT is permitted. If the agency does use JIT,
the proposal still requires the Vivarium signature, via the UCAR
office, on the ORPA signoff page. For proposals with a 'Pending'
status, or after JIT approval is received, the administrator should
send a copy of the pending status or approval letter to the funding
agency. If a sponsor does not use JIT, the UCAR approval letter and
the protocol must be included in the application packet to the funding
agency. As a reminder, sponsors that do permit JIT at the proposal
stage will not fund a project until approval has been received, which
can delay award issuance. Also, 'Pending' status on a protocol is
not permitted on a continuation proposal application.
- Animal protocols are reviewed
yearly. UCAR sends an Annual Protocol Review to the PI on the anniversary
date. Animal protocols must be re-approved every 3 years. UCAR sends
a memo to the PI 3 months before the expiration date.
Administration of Research Subjects
The Department or Center Administrator
may be responsible to oversee the research coordinator's and PI's compliance
with human and animal subjects use. While the PI is responsible for keeping
the records of the study, the administrator typically ensures that all
research staff is appropriately trained and follow the guidelines for human
and animal subjects. The Administrator should keep a copy of each proposal,
including all related approvals, communication from central business offices
(ORPA, ORACS, Auditing, etc.) and, for research subjects, a roster of training
(HSPP numbers). The administrator, research coordinator, or support staff
person generally does the initial work to obtain signatures from RSRB and
UCAR, on ORPA
signoff page. Administrators can assist the PI and his study coordinators
with grants preparation by working with the Department's internal review
process to track grants in preparation; to help prepare the budgets; to act
as a liaison with ORPA, RSRB, UCAR, and OHSP; and to prepare the forms pages
to include with the grant. The more familiar an Administrator is with the
grants preparation process, the more help he or she will be to the PI in
getting the complete grant application submitted to the correct agency in
a timely fashion.
|
 |
|