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SECTION IV


Vertebrate Animal Biosafety Level Criteria

If experimental animals are used, institutional management must provide facilities and staff and establish practices which reasonably assure appropriate levels of environmental quality, safety, and care. Laboratory animal facilities in many ways are extensions of the laboratory. As a general principle, the biosafety level (facilities, practices, and operational requirements) recommended for working with infectious agents in vivo and in vitro are comparable. It is well to remember, however, that the animal room is not the laboratory, and can present some unique problems. In the laboratory, hazardous conditions are caused by personnel or the equipment that is being used. In the animal room the activities of the animals themselves can introduce new hazards. Animals may produce aerosols, and they may also infect and traumatize animal handlers by biting and scratching.

These recommendations presuppose that laboratory animal facilities, operational practices, and quality of animal care meet applicable standards and regulations and that appropriate species have been selected for animal experiments (e.g., Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, HEW Publication No. (NIH) 86-23, Rev. 1985, and Laboratory Animal Welfare Regulations - 9 CFR, Subchapter A, Parts 1, 2 and 3).

Ideally, facilities for laboratory animals used for studies of infectious or noninfectious disease should be physically separate from other activities such as animal production and quarantine, clinical laboratories, and especially from facilities that provide patient care. Animal facilities should be designed and constructed to facilitate cleaning and housekeeping. Traffic flow that will minimize the risk of cross contamination should be considered in the plans. A "clean/dirty hall" layout is useful in achieving this. Floor drains should be installed in animal facilities only on the basis of clearly defined needs. If floor drains are installed, the drain trap should always contain water or a suitable disinfectant.

These recommendations describe four combinations of practices, safety equipment, and facilities for experiments on animals infected with agents which produce, or may produce, human infection. These four combinations provide increasing levels of protection to personnel and to the environment, and are recommended as minimal standards for activities involving infected laboratory animals. These four combinations, designated Animal Biosafety Levels (ABSL) 1-4, describe animal facilities and practices applicable to work on animals infected with agents assigned to corresponding Biosafety Levels 1-4.

Facility standards and practices for invertebrate vectors and hosts are not specifically addressed in standards written for commonly used laboratory animals. "Laboratory Safety for Arboviruses and Certain other Viruses of Vertebrates," (178) prepared by the Subcommittee on Arbovirus Laboratory Safety of the American Committee on Arthropod-Borne Viruses, serves as a useful reference in the design and operation of facilities using arthropods.


Animal Biosafety Level 1


A. Standard Practices

B. Special Practices

C. Safety Equipment (Primary Barriers)

Special containment equipment is not required for animals infected with agents assigned to Biosafety Level 1.

D. Animal Facilities (Secondary Barriers)


Animal Biosafety Level 2


A. Standard Practices

B. Special Practices

C. Safety Equipment (Primary Barriers)

D. Animal Facilities (Secondary Barriers)


Animal Biosafety Level 3


A. Standard Practices

B. Special Practices

C. Safety Equipment (Primary Barriers)

D. Animal Facilities (Secondary Barriers)


Animal Biosafety Level 4


A. Standard Practices

B. Special Practices

C. Safety Equipment (Primary Barriers)

Laboratory animals, infected with agents assigned to Biosafety Level 4, are housed a Class III biological safety cabinet or in a partial containment caging system (such as open cages placed in ventilated enclosures, solid wall and bottom cages covered with filter bonnets, or other equivalent primary containment systems), in specially designed areas in which all personnel are required to wear one-piece positive pressure suits ventilated with a life support system.

Animal work with viral agents that require Biosafety Level 4 secondary containment, and for which highly effective vaccines are available and used, may be conducted with partial containment cages and without the one-piece positive pressure personnel suit if: the facility has been decontaminated, no concurrent experiments are being done in the facility which require Biosafety Level 4 primary and secondary containment, and all other standard and special practices are followed.

D. Animal Facility (Secondary Barriers)


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Last Modified: 1/2/97
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