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Completed OTHER RESEARCH-RELATED NIH (US)

Vivarium Modernization with Digital Ventilated Cages to Enhance Research Capacity and Reproducibility, and Provide Cage Environment Monitoring for Improved Operational Efficiency and Animal Welfare

$4M USD

Funder OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
Recipient Organization Thomas Jefferson University
Country United States
Start Date Aug 01, 2022
End Date Jul 31, 2023
Duration 364 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10533591
Grant Description

ABSTRACT We are seeking support to purchase and install an integrated digital ventilated cage system to enhance operational efficacy and modernize and strengthen the research-supporting operations of an existing, more than twenty-five-year-old shared-use ABSL3 facility. This FOA is timely, since the

addition of the integrated Digital Ventilated Cage (DVC®) system we are requesting would synergize with our ongoing institutional strategic plan to modernize existing vivarium facilities, and have broad benefits for the institutional research community. The static microisolator caging system currently in

use is suboptimal and antiquated and cannot meet the current or future needs of the large number of investigators from different disciplines performing ABSL3 work with animals infected with SAR2-Covid, SARS-Covid variants and other BL3 agents. The DVC® is a unique and revolutionary home-cage monitoring system composed of a mix of electronics and software components to collect a set of

information directly from the home cage. We selected this system with the goals of 1) improving the shared-use facility operational efficiency and 2) enhancing animal welfare management. Furthermore, 3) the unique detection system collects extrinsic environmental conditions (temperature, humidity, noise and vibration, human intervention, etc.) in the home cages. These

factors are likely to have effects on experiments using animals and reporting them in publications as a general practice could contribute to improved research quality (rigor and reproducibility). The modernization of an outdated ABSL3 facility to a more secure one containing a state-of-the-art integrated digital ventilated cage system in two animal housing rooms. This equipment modernization

will combine and potentially synergize with institutionally-funded modernization efforts slated to be completed within the next six months – for example, the modernized animal housing caging system will be located in rooms adjacent to and with direct access to a modernized BL3 suite for tissue processing and specimen processing. Therefore, our proposed equipment modernization is a critical

step towards meeting the needs of current and future investigators from diverse disciplines using rodent animal models for research involving an increasing number of BL3 pathogens.

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Thomas Jefferson University

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