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40 CFR Part 160 - Environmental Protection Agency
Thursday, August 17, 1989
- Subpart A -
General Provisions
- Section
- 160.1
Scope.
- 160.3
Definitions.
- 160.10
Applicability to studies performed under grants and contracts.
- 160.12
Statement of compliance or non-compliance.
- 160.15
Inspection of a testing facility.
- 160.17
Effects of non-compliance.
-
- Subpart B-Organization
and Personnel
- 160.29
Personnel.
- 160.31
Testing facility management.
- 160.33
Study director.
- 160.35
Quality assurance unit.
- Subpart C-Facilities
- 160.41 General.
- 160.43 Test system care facilities.
- 160.45 Test system supply
facilities.
- 160.47 Facilities for handling
test, control, and reference substances.
- 160.49 Laboratory operation
areas.
- 160.51 Specimen and data storage
facilities.
-
- Subpart D-Equipment
- 160.61 Equipment
design.
- 160.63 Maintenance
and calibration of equipment.
-
- Subpart
E-Testing Facilities Operation
- 160.81
Standard operating procedures.
- 160.83
Reagents and solutions.
- 160.90
Animal and other test system
care.
-
- Subpart
F-Test, Control, and Reference
Substances
- 160.105
Test, control, and
reference substance
characterization.
- 160.107
Test, control, and
reference substance
handling.
- 160.113
Mixtures of substances
with carriers.
-
- Subpart
G-Protocol
for
and
Conduct
of
a
Study
- 160.120
Protocol.
- 160.130
Conduct
of
a
study.
- 160.135
Physical
and
chemical
characterization
studies.
-
- Subparts
H-I
[Reserved]
- Subpart
J-Records
and
Reports
- 160.185
Reporting
of
study
results.
- 160.190
Storage
and
retrieval
of
records and data.
- 160.195
Retention
of
records.
AUTHORITY: 7 U.S.C. 136a, 136c, 136d, 136f, 136j, 136t, 136v, 136w;
21 U.S.C. 346a, 348, 371, Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1970. SOURCE:
54 FR 34067, Aug. 17, 1989, unless otherwise noted
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GOOD LABORATORY PRACTICE STANDARDS
40 CFR Part 160 - Environmental Protection Agency
Thursday, August 17, 1989
Subpart A-General Provisions
- Section 160.1 Scope.
- (a) This part prescribes good laboratory practices for conducting
studies that support or are intended to support applications for
research or marketing permits for pesticide products regulated by
the EPA. This part is intended to assure the quality and integrity
of data submitted pursuant to sections 3, 4, 5, 8, 18 and 24(c) of
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA),
as amended (7 U.S.C. 136a, 136c, 136f, 136q and 136v(c)) and sections
408 and 409 of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) (21
U.S.C. 346a, 348).
- (b) This part applies to any study described by paragraph (a) of
this section which any person conducts, initiates, or supports on
or after October 16, 1989.
- Section 160.3 Definitions.
- As used in this part the following terms shall have the meanings
specified:
- "Application for research or marketing permit" includes:
- (1) An application for registration, amended registration,
or reregistration of a pesticide product under FIFRA
sections 3, 4 or 24(c).
- (2) An application for an experimental use permit under
FIFRA section 5.
- (3) An application for an exemption under FIFRA section
18.
- (4) A petition or other request for establishment or
modification of a tolerance, for an exemption for the
need for a tolerance, or for other clearance under FFDCA
section 408.
- (5) A petition or other request for establishment or
modification of a food additive regulation or other clearance
by EPA under FFDCA section 409.
- (6) A submission of data in response to a notice issued
by EPA under FIFRA section 3(c)(2)(B).
- (7) Any other application, petition, or submission
sent to EPA intended to persuade EPA to grant, modify,
or leave unmodified a registration or other approval
required as a condition of sale or distribution of a
pesticide.
- "Batch" means a specific
quantity or lot of a test, control, or reference substance
that has been characterized
according to Section 160.105(a).
- "Carrier" means any material,
including but not limited to feed, water, soil, nutrient
media, with which the
test substance is combined for administration to a test system.
- "Control substance" means
any chemical substance or mixture, or any other material
other than a test substance,
feed, or water, that is administered to the test system in
the course of a study for the purpose of establishing a basis
for comparison with the test substance for known chemical or
biological measurements.
- "EPA" means the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
- "Experimental start date" means
the first date the test substance is applied to the test
system.
- "Experimental termination date" means
the last date on which data are collected directly from the
study.
- "FDA" means the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
- "FFDCA" means the Federal
Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, as amended (21 U.S.C. 321 et
seq).
- "FIFRA" means the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act as amended (7
U.S.C. 136 et seq).
- "Person" includes an individual,
partnership, corporation, association, scientific or academic
establishment, government
agency, or organizational unit thereof, and any other legal
entity.
- "Quality assurance unit" means
any person or organizational element, except the study director,
designated by testing facility
management to perform the duties relating to quality assurance
of the studies.
- "Raw data" means any laboratory worksheets, records,
memoranda, notes, or exact copies thereof, that are the result
of original observations and activities of a study and are
necessary for the reconstruction and evaluation of the report
of that study. In the event that exact transcripts of raw data
have been prepared (e.g., tapes which have been transcribed
verbatim, dated, and verified accurate by signature), the exact
copy or exact transcript may be substituted for the original
source as raw data. "Raw data'' may include photographs,
microfilm or microfiche copies, computer printouts, magnetic
media, including dictated observations, and recorded data from
automated instruments.
- "Reference substance" means
any chemical substance or mixture, or analytical standard,
or material other than
a test substance, feed, or water, that is administered to or
used in analyzing the test system in the course of a study
for the purposes of establishing a basis for comparison with
the test substance for known chemical or biological measurements.
- "Specimens" means any material
derived from a test system for examination or analysis.
- "Sponsor" means:
- (1) A person who initiates and supports, by provision
of financial or other resources, a study; -
- (2) A person who submits a study to the EPA in support
of an application for a research or marketing permit;
or
- (3) A testing facility, if it both initiates and actually
conducts the study.
- "Study" means any experiment at one or more test
sites, in which a test substance is studied in a test system
under laboratory conditions or in the environment to determine
or help predict its effects, metabolism, product performance
(efficacy studies only as required by 40 CFR 158.640), environmental
and chemical fate, persistence and residue, or other characteristics
in humans, other living organisms, or media. The term "study''
does not include basic exploratory studies carried out to determine
whether a test substance or a test method has any potential
utility.
- "Study completion date" means
the date the final report is signed by the study director.
- "Study director" means the
individual responsible for the overall conduct of a study.
- "Study initiation date" means
the date the protocol is signed by the study director.
- "Test substance" means a
substance or mixture administered or added to a test system
in a study, which substance or mixture:
- (1) Is the subject of an application for a research
or marketing permit supported by the study, or is the
contemplated subject of such an application; or
- (2) Is an ingredient, impurity, degradation product,
metabolite, or radioactive isotope of a substance described
by paragraph (1) of this definition, or some other substance
related to a substance described by that paragraph, which
is used in the study to assist in characterizing the
toxicity, metabolism, or other characteristics of a substance
described by that paragraph.
- "Test system" means any animal, plant, microorganism,
chemical or physical matrix, including but not limited to soil
or water, or subparts thereof, to which the test, control,
or reference substance is administered or added for study. "Test
system'' also includes appropriate groups or components of
the system not treated with the test, control, or reference
substance.
- "Testing facility" means a person who actually
conducts a study, i.e., actually uses the test substance in
a test system. "Testing facility'' encompasses only those
operational units that are being or have been used to conduct
studies.
- "Vehicle" means any agent
which facilitates the mixture, dispersion, or solubilization
of a test substance
with a carrier.
-
- Section 160.10 Applicability to studies performed under grants
and contracts.
- When a sponsor or other person utilizes the services of a consulting
laboratory, contractor, or grantee to perform all or a part of a
study to which this part applies, it shall notify the consulting
laboratory, contractor, or grantee that the service is, or is part
of, a study that must be conducted in compliance with the provisions
of this part.
- Section 160.12 Statement of compliance or non-compliance.
- Any person who submits to EPA an application for a research or
marketing permit and who, in connection with the application, submits
data from a study to which this part applies shall include in the
application a true and correct statement, signed by the applicant,
the sponsor, and the study director, of one of the following types:
- (a) A statement that the study was conducted in accordance
with this part; or
- (b) A statement describing in detail all differences between
the practices used in the study and those required by this
part; or
- (c) A statement that the person was not a sponsor of the
study, did not conduct the study, and does not know whether
the study was conducted in accordance with this part.
-
-
- Section 160.15 Inspection of a testing facility.
- (a) A testing facility shall permit an authorized employee or duly
designated representative of EPA or FDA, at reasonable times and
in a reasonable manner, to inspect the facility and to inspect (and
in the case of records also to copy) all records and specimens required
to be maintained regarding studies to which this part applies. The
records inspection and copying requirements should not apply to quality
assurance unit records of findings and problems, or to actions recommended
and taken, except that EPA may seek production of these records in
litigation or formal adjudicatory hearings.
- (b) EPA will not consider reliable for purposes of supporting an
application for a research or marketing permit any data developed
by a testing facility or sponsor that refuses to permit inspection
in accordance with this part. The determination that a study will
not be considered in support of an application for a research or
marketing permit does not, however, relieve the applicant for such
a permit of any obligation under any applicable statute or regulation
to submit the results of the study to EPA.
- Section 160.17 Effects of non-compliance.
- (a) EPA may refuse to consider reliable for purposes of supporting
an application for a research or marketing permit any data from a
study which was not conducted in accordance with this part.
- (b) Submission of a statement required by Section 160.12 which
is false may form the basis for cancellation, suspension, or modification
of the research or marketing permit, or denial or disapproval of
an application for such a permit, under FIFRA section 3, 5, 6, 18,
or 24 or FFDCA section 406 or 409, or for criminal prosecution under
18 U.S.C. 2 or 1001 or FIFRA section 14, or for imposition of civil
penalties under FIFRA section 14.
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Subpart B-Organization and Personnel
- Section 160.29 Personnel.
- (a) Each individual engaged in the conduct of or responsible for
the supervision of a study shall have education, training, and experience,
or combination thereof, to enable that individual to perform the
assigned functions.
- (b) Each testing facility shall maintain a current summary of training
and experience and job description for each individual engaged in
or supervising the conduct of a study.
- (c) There shall be a sufficient number of personnel for the timely
and proper conduct of the study according to the protocol.
- (d) Personnel shall take necessary personal sanitation and health
precautions designed to avoid contamination of test, control, and
reference substances and test systems.
- (e) Personnel engaged in a study shall wear clothing appropriate
for the duties they perform. Such clothing shall be changed as often
as necessary to prevent microbiological, radiological, or chemical
contamination of test systems and test, control, and reference substances.
- (f) Any individual found at any time to have an illness that may
adversely affect the quality and integrity of the study shall be
excluded from direct contact with test systems, and test, control,
and reference substances, and any other operation or function that
may adversely affect the study until the condition is corrected.
All personnel shall be instructed to report to their immediate supervisors
any health or medical conditions that may reasonably be considered
to have an adverse effect on a study.
- Section 160.31 Testing facility management.
- For each study, testing facility management shall:
- (a) Designate a study director as described in Section 160.33
before the study is initiated.
- (b) Replace the study director promptly if it becomes necessary
to do so during the conduct of a study.
- (c) Assure that there is a quality assurance unit as described
in Section 160.35.
- (d) Assure that test, control, and reference substances or
mixtures have been appropriately tested for identity, strength,
purity, stability, and uniformity, as applicable.
- (e) Assure that personnel, resources, facilities, equipment,
materials and methodologies are available as scheduled.
- (f) Assure that personnel clearly understand the functions
they are to perform.
- (g) Assure that any deviations from these regulations reported
by the quality assurance unit are communicated to the study
director and corrective actions are taken and documented.
-
-
- Section 160.33 Study director.
- For each study, a scientist or other professional of appropriate
education, training, and experience, or combination thereof, shall
be identified as the study director. The study director has overall
responsibility for the technical conduct of the study, as well as
for the interpretation, analysis, documentation, and reporting of
results, and represents the single point of study control.
- The study director shall assure that:
- (a) The protocol, including any change, is approved as provided
by Section 160.120 and is followed.
- (b) All experimental data, including observations of unanticipated
responses of the test system are accurately recorded and verified.
- (c) Unforseen circumstances that may affect the quality and
integrity of the study are noted when they occur, and corrective
action is taken and documented.
- (d) Test systems are as specified in the protocol.
- (e) All applicable good laboratory practice regulations are
followed.
- (f) All raw data, documentation, protocols, specimens, and
final reports are transferred to the archives during or at
the close of the study.
-
-
- Section 160.35 Quality assurance unit.
- (a) A testing facility shall have a quality assurance unit which
shall be responsible for monitoring each study to assure management
that the facilities, equipment, personnel, methods, practices, records,
and controls are in conformance with the regulations in this part.
For any given study, the quality assurance unit shall be entirely
separate from and independent of the personnel engaged in the direction
and conduct of that study. The quality assurance unit shall conduct
inspections and maintain records appropriate to the study.
- (b) The quality assurance unit shall:
- (1) Maintain a copy of a master schedule sheet of all studies
conducted at the testing facility indexed by test substance,
and containing the test system, nature of study, date study
was initiated, current status of each study, identity of the
sponsor, and name of the study director.
- (2) Maintain copies of all protocols pertaining to all studies
for which the unit is responsible.
- (3) Inspect each study at intervals adequate to ensure the
integrity of the study and maintain written and properly signed
records of each periodic inspection showing the date of the
inspection, the study inspected, the phase or segment of the
study inspected, the person performing the inspection, findings
and problems, action recommended and taken to resolve existing
problems, and any scheduled date for reinspection. Any problems
which are likely to affect study integrity found during the
course of an inspection shall be brought to the attention of
the study director and management immediately.
- (4) Periodically submit to management and the study director
written status reports on each study, noting any problems and
the corrective actions taken.
- (5) Determine that no deviations from approved protocols
or standard operating procedures were made without proper authorization
and documentation.
- (6) Review the final study report to assure that such report
accurately describes the methods and standard operating procedures,
and that the reported results accurately reflect the raw data
of the study.
- (7) Prepare and sign a statement to be included with the
final study report which shall specify the dates inspections
were made and findings reported to management and to the study
director.
- (c) The responsibilities and procedures applicable to the quality
assurance unit, the records maintained by the quality assurance unit,
and the method of indexing such records shall be in writing and shall
be maintained. These items including inspection dates, the study
inspected, the phase or segment of the study inspected, and the name
of the individual performing the inspection shall be made available
for inspection to authorized employees or duly designated representatives
of EPA or FDA.
- (d) An authorized employee or a duly designated representative
of EPA or FDA shall have access to the written procedures established
for the inspection and may request testing facility management to
certify that inspections are being implemented, performed, documented,
and followed up in accordance with this paragraph.
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Subpart C - Facilities
- Section 160.41 General.
- Each testing facility shall be of suitable size and construction
to facilitate the proper conduct of studies. Testing facilities which
are not located within an indoor controlled environment shall be
of suitable location to facilitate the proper conduct of studies.
Testing facilities shall be designed so that there is a degree of
separation that will prevent any function or activity from having
an adverse effect on the study.
- Section 160.43 Test system care facilities.
- (a) A testing facility shall have a sufficient number of animal
rooms or other test system areas, as needed, to ensure: proper separation
of species or test systems, isolation of individual projects, quarantine
or isolation of animals or other test systems, and routine or specialized
housing of animals or other test systems.
- (1) In tests with plants or aquatic animals, proper separation
of species can be accomplished within a room or area by housing
them separately in different chambers or aquaria. Separation
of species is unnecessary where the protocol specifies the
simultaneous exposure of two or more species in the same chamber,
aquarium, or housing unit.
- (2) Aquatic toxicity tests for individual projects shall
be isolated to the extent necessary to prevent cross-contamination
of different chemicals used in different tests.
- (b) A testing facility shall have a number of animal rooms or other
test system areas separate from those described in paragraph (a)
of this section to ensure isolation of studies being done with test
systems or test, control, and reference substances known to be biohazardous,
including volatile substances, aerosols, radioactive materials, and
infectious agents.
- (c) Separate areas shall be provided, as appropriate, for the diagnosis,
treatment, and control of laboratory test system diseases. These
areas shall provide effective isolation for the housing of test systems
either known or suspected of being diseased, or of being carriers
of disease, from other test systems.
- (d) Facilities shall have proper provisions for collection and
disposal of contaminated water, soil, or other spent materials. When
animals are housed, facilities shall exist for the collection and
disposal of all animal waste and refuse or for safe sanitary storage
of waste before removal from the testing facility. Disposal facilities
shall be so provided and operated as to minimize vermin infestation,
odors, disease hazards, and environmental contamination.
- (e) Facilities shall have provisions to regulate environmental
conditions (e.g., temperature, humidity, photoperiod) as specified
in the protocol.
- (f) For marine test organisms, an adequate supply of clean sea
water or artificial sea water (prepared from deionized or distilled
water and sea salt mixture) shall be available. The ranges of composition
shall be as specified in the protocol.
- (g) For freshwater organisms, an adequate supply of clean water
of the appropriate hardness, pH, and temperature, and which is free
of contaminants capable of interfering with the study, shall be available
as specified in the protocol.
- (h) For plants, an adequate supply of soil of the appropriate composition,
as specified in the protocol, shall be available as needed.
- Section 160.45 Test system supply facilities.
- (a) There shall be storage areas, as needed, for feed, nutrients,
soils, bedding, supplies, and equipment. Storage areas for feed nutrients,
soils, and bedding shall be separated from areas where the test systems
are located and shall be protected against infestation or contamination.
Perishable supplies shall be preserved by appropriate means.
- (b) When appropriate, plant supply facilities shall be provided.
As specified in the protocol, these include:
- (1) Facilities for holding, culturing, and maintaining algae
and aquatic plants.
- (2) Facilities for plant growth, including, but not limited
to greenhouses, growth chambers, light banks, and fields.
- (c) When appropriate, facilities for aquatic animal tests shall
be provided. These include, but are not limited to, aquaria, holding
tanks, ponds, and ancillary equipment, as specified in the protocol.
- Section 160.47 Facilities for handling test, control, and reference
substances.
- (a) As necessary to prevent contamination or mixups, there shall
be separate areas for:
- (1) Receipt and storage of the test, control, and reference
substances.
- (2) Mixing of the test, control, and reference substances
with a carrier, e.g., feed.
- (3) Storage of the test, control, and reference substance
mixtures.
- (b) Storage areas for test, control, and/or reference substance
and for test, control, and/or reference mixtures shall be separate
from areas housing the test systems and shall be adequate to preserve
the identity, strength, purity, and stability of the substances and
mixtures.
- Section 160.49 Laboratory operation areas.
- Separate laboratory space and other space shall be provided, as
needed, for the performance of the routine and specialized procedures
required by studies.
- Section 160.51 Specimen and data storage facilities.
- Space shall be provided for archives, limited to access by authorized
personnel only, for the storage and retrieval of all raw data and
specimens from completed studies.
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Subpart D-Equipment
- Section 160.61 Equipment design.
- Equipment used in the generation, measurement, or assessment of
data and equipment used for facility environmental control shall
be of appropriate design and adequate capacity to function according
to the protocol and shall be suitably located for operation, inspection,
cleaning, and maintenance.
- Section 160.63 Maintenance and calibration of equipment.
- (a) Equipment shall be adequately inspected, cleaned, and maintained.
Equipment used for the generation, measurement, or assessment of
data shall be adequately tested, calibrated, and/or standardized.
- (b) The written standard operating procedures required under Section
160.81(b)(11) shall set forth in sufficient detail the methods, materials,
and schedules to be used in the routine inspection, cleaning, maintenance,
testing, calibration, and/ or standardization of equipment, and shall
specify, when appropriate, remedial action to be taken in the event
of failure or malfunction of equipment. The written standard operating
procedures shall designate the person responsible for the performance
of each operation.
- (c) Written records shall be maintained of all inspection, maintenance,
testing, calibrating, and/or standardizing operations. These records,
containing the dates of the operations, shall describe whether the
maintenance operations were routine and followed the written standard
operating procedures. Written records shall be kept of nonroutine
repairs performed on equipment as a result of failure and malfunction.
Such records shall document the nature of the defect, how and when
the defect was discovered, and any remedial action taken in response
to the defect.
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Subpart E-Testing Facilities Operation
- Section 160.81 Standard operating procedures.
- (a) A testing facility shall have standard operating procedures
in writing setting forth study methods that management is satisfied
are adequate to insure the quality and integrity of the data generated
in the course of a study. All deviations in a study from standard
operating procedures shall be authorized by the study director and
shall be documented in the raw data. Significant changes in established
standard operating procedures shall be properly authorized in writing
by management.
- (b) Standard operating procedures shall be established for, but
not limited to, the following:
- (1) Test system area preparation.
- (2) Test system care.
- (3) Receipt, identification, storage, handling, mixing, and
method of sampling of the test, control, and reference substances.
- (4) Test system observations.
- (5) Laboratory or other tests.
- (6) Handling of test systems found moribund or dead during
study.
- (7) Necropsy of test systems or postmortem examination of
test systems.
- (8) Collection and identification of specimens.
- (9) Histopathology.
- (10) Data handling, storage and retrieval.
- (11) Maintenance and calibration of equipment.
- (12) Transfer, proper placement, and identification of test
systems.
- (c) Each laboratory or other study area shall have immediately
available manuals and standard operating procedures relative to the
laboratory or field procedures being performed. Published literature
may be used as a supplement to standard operating procedures.
- (d) A historical file of standard operating procedures, and all
revisions thereof, including the dates of such revisions, shall be
maintained.
- Section 160.83 Reagents and solutions.
- All reagents and solutions in the laboratory areas shall be labeled
to indicate identity, titer or concentration, storage requirements,
and expiration date. Deteriorated or outdated reagents and solutions
shall not be used.
- Section 160.90 Animal and other test system care.
- (a) There shall be standard operating procedures for the housing,
feeding, handling, and care of animals and other test systems.
- (b) All newly received test systems from outside sources shall
be isolated and their health status or appropriateness for the study
shall be evaluated. This evaluation shall be in accordance with acceptable
veterinary medical practice or scientific methods.
- (c) At the initiation of a study, test systems shall be free of
any disease or condition that might interfere with the purpose or
conduct of the study. If during the course of the study, the test
systems contract such a disease or condition, the diseased test systems
should be isolated, if necessary. These test systems may be treated
for disease or signs of disease provided that such treatment does
not interfere with the study. The diagnosis, authorization of treatment,
description of treatment, and each date of treatment shall be documented
and shall be retained.
- (d) Warm-blooded animals, adult reptiles, and adult terrestrial
amphibians used in laboratory procedures that require manipulations
and observations over an extended period of time or in studies that
require these test systems to be removed from and returned to their
test system-housing units for any reason (e.g., cage cleaning, treatment,
etc.), shall receive appropriate identification (e.g., tattoo, color
code, ear tag, ear punch, etc.). All information needed to specifically
identify each test system within the test system-housing unit shall
appear on the outside of that unit. Suckling mammals and juvenile
birds are excluded from the requirement of individual identification
unless otherwise specified in the protocol.
- (e) Except as specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, test
systems of different species shall be housed in separate rooms when
necessary. Test systems of the same species, but used in different
studies, should not ordinarily be housed in the same room when inadvertent
exposure to test, control, or reference substances or test system
mixup could affect the outcome of either study. If such mixed housing
is necessary, adequate differentiation by space and identification
shall be made.
- (1) Plants, invertebrate animals, aquatic vertebrate animals,
and organisms that may be used in multispecies tests need not
be housed in separate rooms, provided that they are adequately
segregated to avoid mixup and cross contamination.
- (2) [Reserved]
- (f) Cages, racks, pens, enclosures, aquaria, holding tanks, ponds,
growth chambers, and other holding, rearing and breeding areas, and
accessory equipment, shall be cleaned and sanitized at appropriate
intervals.
- (g) Feed, soil, and water used for the test systems shall be analyzed
periodically to ensure that contaminants known to be capable of interfering
with the study and reasonably expected to be present in such feed,
soil, or water are not present at levels above those specified in
the protocol. Documentation of such analyses shall be maintained
as raw data.
- (h) Bedding used in animal cages or pens shall not interfere with
the purpose or conduct of the study and shall be changed as often
as necessary to keep the animals dry and clean.
- (i) If any pest control materials are used, the use shall be documented.
Cleaning and pest control materials that interfere with the study
shall not be used.
- (j) All plant and animal test systems shall be acclimatized to
the environmental conditions of the test, prior to their use in a
study.
Return to the Main Quality Assurance Page
-
Subpart F-Test, Control, and Reference Substances
- Section 160.105 Test, control, and reference substance characterization.
- (a) The identity, strength, purity, and composition, or other characteristics
which will appropriately define the test, control, or reference substance
shal1 be determined for each batch and shall be documented before
its use in a study. Methods of synthesis, fabrication, or derivation
of the test, control, or reference substance shall be documented
by the sponsor or the testing facility, and the location of such
documentation shall be specified.
- (b) When relevant to the conduct of the study the solubility of
each test, control, or reference substance shall be determined by
the testing facility or the sponsor before the experimental start
date. The stability of the test, control, or reference substance
shall be determined before the experimental start date or concomitantly
according to written standard operating procedures, which provide
for periodic analysis of each batch.
- (c) Each storage container for a test, control, or reference substance
shall be labeled by name, chemical abstracts service number (CAS)
or code number, batch number, expiration date, if any, and, where
appropriate, storage conditions necessary to maintain the identity,
strength, purity, and composition of the test, control, or reference
substance. Storage containers shall be assigned to a particular test
substance for the duration of the study.
- (d) For studies of more than 4 weeks experimental duration, reserve
samples from each batch of test, control, and reference substances
shall be retained for the period of time provided by Section 160.195.
- (e) The stability of test, control, and reference substances under
storage conditions at the test site shall be known for all studies.
- Section 160.107 Test, control, and reference substance handling.
- Procedures shall be established for a system for the handling of
the test, control, and reference substances to ensure that:
- (a) There is proper storage.
- (b) Distribution is made in a manner designed to preclude
the possibility of contamination, deterioration, or damage.
- (c) Proper identification is maintained throughout the distribution
process.
- (d) The receipt and distribution of each batch is documented.
Such documentation shall include the date and quantity of each
batch distributed or returned.
-
-
Section 160.113 Mixtures of substances with carriers.
- (a) For each test, control, or reference substance that is mixed
with a carrier, tests by appropriate analytical methods shall be
conducted:
- (1) To determine the uniformity of the mixture and to determine,
periodically, the concentration of the test, control, or reference
substance in the mixture.
- (2) When relevant to the conduct of the study, to determine
the solubility of each test, control, or reference substance
in the mixture by the testing facility or the sponsor before
the experimental start date.
- (3) To determine the stability of the test, control, or reference
substance in the mixture before the experimental start date
or concomitantly according to written standard operating procedures,
which provide for periodic analysis of each batch.
- (b) Where any of the components of the test, control, or reference
substance carrier mixture has an expiration date, that date shall
be clearly shown on the container. If more than one component has
an expiration date, the earliest date shall be shown.
- (c) If a vehicle is used to facilitate the mixing of a test substance
with a carrier, assurance shall be provided that the vehicle does
not interfere with the integrity of the test.
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Subpart G-Protocol for and Conduct of a Study
- Section 160.120 Protocol.
- (a) Each study shall have an approved written protocol that clearly
indicates the objectives and all methods for the conduct of the study.
The protocol shall contain but shall not necessarily be limited to
the following information:
- (1) A descriptive title and statement of the purpose of the
study.
- (2) Identification of the test, control, and reference substance
by name, chemical abstracts service (CAS) number or code number.
- (3) The name and address of the sponsor and the name and
address of the testing facility at which the study is being
conducted.
- (4) The proposed experimental start and termination dates.
- (5) Justification for selection of the test system.
- (6) Where applicable, the number, body weight range, sex,
source of supply, species, strain, substrain, and age of the
test system.
- (7) The procedure for identification of the test system.
- (8) A description of the experimental design, including methods
for the control of bias.
- (9) Where applicable, a description and/or identification
of the diet used in the study as well as solvents, emulsifiers
and/or other materials used to solubilize or suspend the test,
control, or reference substances before mixing with the carrier.
The description shall include specifications for acceptable
levels of contaminants that are reasonably expected to be present
in the dietary materials and are known to be capable of interfering
with the purpose or conduct of the study if present at levels
greater than established by the specifications.
- (10) The route of administration and the reason for its choice.
- (11) Each dosage level, expressed in milligrams per kilogram
of body or test system weight or other appropriate units, of
the test, control, or reference substance to be administered
and the method and frequency of administration.
- (12) The type and frequency of tests, analyses, and measurements
to be made.
- (13) The records to be maintained.
- (14) The date of approval of the protocol by the sponsor
and the dated signature of the study director.
- (15) A statement of the proposed statistical method to be
used.
- (b) All changes in or revisions of an approved protocol and the
reasons therefore shall be documented, signed by the study director,
dated, and maintained with the protocol.
- Section 160.130 Conduct of a study.
- (a) The study shall be conducted in accordance with the protocol.
- (b) The test systems shall be monitored in conformity with the
protocol.
- (c) Specimens shall be identified by test system, study, nature,
and date of collection. This information shall be located on the
specimen container or shall accompany the specimen in a manner that
precludes error in the recording and storage of data.
- (d) In animal studies where histopathology is required, records
of gross findings for a specimen from postmortem observations shall
be available to a pathologist when examining that specimen histopathologically.
- (e) All data generated during the conduct of a study, except those
that are generated by automated data collection systems, shall be
recorded directly, promptly, and legibly in ink. All data entries
shall be dated on the day of entry and signed or initialed by the
person entering the data. Any change in entries shall be made so
as not to obscure the original entry, shall indicate the reason for
such change, and shall be dated and signed or identified at the time
of the change. In automated data collection systems, the individual
responsible for direct data input shall be identified at the time
of data input. Any change in automated data entries shall be made
so as not to obscure the original entry, shall indicate the reason
for change, shall be dated, and the responsible individual shall
be identified.
- Section 160.135 Physical and chemical characterization studies.
- (a) All provisions of the GLP standards shall apply to physical
and chemical characterization studies designed to determine stability,
solubility, octanol water partition coefficient, volatility, and
persistence (such as biodegradation, photodegradation, and chemical
degradation studies) of test, control, or reference substances.
- (b) The following GLP standards shall not apply to studies, other
than those designated in paragraph (a) of this section, designed
to determine physical and chemical characteristics of a test, control,
or reference substance:
- Section 160.31 (c), (d), and (g)
- Section 160.35 (b) and (c)
- Section 160.43
- Section 160.45
- Section 160.47
- Section 160.49
- Section 160.81 (b) (1), (2), (6) through (9), and (12)
- Section 160.90
- Section 160.105 (a) through (d)
- Section 160.113
- Section 160.120(a) (5) through (12), and (15)
- Section 160.185(a) (5) through (8), (10), (12), and (14)
- Section 160.195 (c) and (d)
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Subparts H-I [Reserved]
Return to the Main Quality Assurance Page
Subpart J-Records and Reports
- Section 160.185 Reporting of study results.
- (a) A final report shall be prepared for each study and shall include,
but not necessarily be limited to, the following:
- (1) Name and address of the facility performing the study
and the dates on which the study was initiated and was completed,
terminated, or discontinued.
- (2) Objectives and procedures stated in the approved protocol,
including any changes in the original protocol.
- (3) Statistical methods employed for analyzing the data.
- (4) The test, control, and reference substances identified
by name, chemical abstracts service (CAS) number or code number,
strength, purity, and composition, or other appropriate characteristics.
- (5) Stability and, when relevant to the conduct of the study
the solubility of the test, control, and reference substances
under the conditions of administration.
- (6) A description of the methods used.
- (7) A description of the test system used. Where applicable,
the final report shall include the number of animals used,
sex, body weight range, source of supply, species, strain and
substrain, age, and procedure used for identification.
- (8) A description of the dosage, dosage regimen, route of
administration, and duration.
- (9) A description of all circumstances that may have affected
the quality or integrity of the data.
- (10) The name of the study director, the names of other scientists
or professionals and the names of all supervisory personnel,
involved in the study.
- (11) A description of the transformations, calculations,
or operations performed on the data, a summary and analysis
of the data, and a statement of the conclusions drawn from
the analysis.
- (12) The signed and dated reports of each of the individual
scientists or other professionals involved in the study, including
each person who, at the request or direction of the testing
facility or sponsor, conducted an analysis or evaluation of
data or specimens from the study after data generation was
completed.
- (13) The locations where all specimens, raw data, and the
final report are to be stored.
- (14) The statement prepared and signed by the quality assurance
unit as described in Section 160.35(b)(7).
- (b) The final report shall be signed and dated by the study director.
- (c) Corrections or additions to a final report shall be in the
form of an amendment by the study director. The amendment shall clearly
identify that part of the final report that is being added to or
corrected and the reasons for the correction or addition, and shall
be signed and dated by the person responsible. Modification of a
final report to comply with the submission requirements of EPA does
not constitute a correction, addition, or amendment to a final report.
- (d) A copy of the final report and of any amendment to it shall
be maintained by the sponsor and the test facility.
- Section 160.190 Storage and retrieval of records and data.
- (a) All raw data, documentation, records, protocols, specimens,
and final reports generated as a result of a study shall be retained.
Specimens obtained from mutagenicity tests, specimens of soil, water,
and plants, and wet specimens of blood, urine, feces, and biological
fluids, do not need to be retained after quality assurance verification.
Correspondence and other documents relating to interpretation and
evaluation of data, other than those documents contained in the final
report, also shall be retained.
- (b) There shall be archives for orderly storage and expedient retrieval
of all raw data, documentation, protocols, specimens, and interim
and final reports. Conditions of storage shall minimize deterioration
of the documents or specimens in accordance with the requirements
for the time period of their retention and the nature of the documents
of specimens. A testing facility may contract with commercial archives
to provide a repository for all material to be retained. Raw data
and specimens may be retained elsewhere provided that the archives
have specific reference to those other locations.
- (c) An individual shall be identified as responsible for the archives.
- (d) Only authorized personnel shall enter the archives.
- (e) Material retained or referred to in the archives shall be indexed
to permit expedient retrieval.
- Section 160.195 Retention of records.
- (a) Record retention requirements set forth in this section do
not supersede the record retention requirements of any other regulations
in this subchapter.
- (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, documentation
records, raw data, and specimens pertaining to a study and required
to be retained by this part shall be retained in the archive(s) for
whichever of the following periods is longest:
- (1) In the case of any study used to support an application
for a research or marketing permit approved by EPA, the period
during which the sponsor holds any research or marketing permit
to which the study is pertinent.
- (2) A period of at least 5 years following the date on which
the results of the study are submitted to the EPA in support
of an application for a research or marketing permit.
- (3) In other situations (e.g., where the study does not result
in the submission of the study in support of an application
for a research or marketing permit), a period of at least 2
years following the date on which the study is completed, terminated,
or discontinued.
- (c) Wet specimens, samples of test, control, or reference substances,
and specially prepared material which are relatively fragile and
differ markedly in stability and quality during storage, shall be
retained only as long as the quality of the preparation affords evaluation.
Specimens obtained from mutagenicity tests, specimens of soil, water,
and plants, and wet specimens of blood, urine, feces, and biological
fluids, do not need to be retained after quality assurance verification.
In no case shall retention be required for longer periods than those
set forth in paragraph (b) of this section.
- (d) The master schedule sheet, copies of protocols, and records
of quality assurance inspections, as required by Section 160.35(c)
shall be maintained by the quality assurance unit as an easily accessible
system of records for the period of time specified in paragraph (b)
of this section.
- (e) Summaries of training and experience and job descriptions required
to be maintained by Section 160.29(b) may be retained along with
all other testing facility employment records for the length of time
specified in paragraph (b) of this section.
- (f) Records and reports of the maintenance and calibration and
inspection of equipment, as required by Section 160.63 (b) and (c),
shall be retained for the length of time specified in paragraph (b)
of this section.
- (g) If a facility conducting testing or an archive contracting
facility goes out of business, all raw data, documentation, and other
material specified in this section shall be transferred to the archives
of the sponsor of the study. The EPA shall be notified in writing
of such a transfer.
- (h) Specimens, samples, or other non-documentary materials need
not be retained after EPA has notified in writing the sponsor or
testing facility holding the materials that retention is no longer
required by EPA. Such notification normally will be furnished upon
request after EPA or FDA has completed an audit of the particular
study to which the materials relate and EPA has concluded that the
study was conducted in accordance with this part.
- (i) Records required by this part may be retained either as original
records or as true copies such as photocopies, microfilm, microfiche,
or other accurate reproductions of the original records.

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Before initiating a study requiring compliance vvith the GLPs, please
contact Dr. Michael Mispagel,
UGA's Quality Assurance Unit, at 2- 5875 to assist you in meeting these
standards.
For additional information please see the "Research
Policies & Procedures".
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