2000
[DOCID: f:h4281enr.txt]
H.R.4281
One Hundred Sixth Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE SECOND SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Monday,
the twenty-fourth day of January, two thousand
An Act
To establish, wherever feasible, guidelines, recommendations, and
regulations that promote the regulatory acceptance of new or revised
scientifically valid toxicological tests that protect human and animal
health and the environment while reducing, refining, or replacing animal
tests and ensuring human safety and product effectiveness.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``ICCVAM Authorization Act of 2000''.
SEC. 2. DEFINITIONS.
In this Act:
(1) Alternative test method.--The term ``alternative test
method'' means a test method that--
(A) includes any new or revised test method; and
(B)(i) reduces the number of animals required;
(ii) refines procedures to lessen or eliminate pain or
distress to animals, or enhances animal well-being; or
(iii) replaces animals with non-animal systems or one
animal species with a phylogenetically lower animal species,
such as replacing a mammal with an invertebrate.
(2) ICCVAM test recommendation.--The term ``ICCVAM test
recommendation'' means a summary report prepared by the ICCVAM
characterizing the results of a scientific expert peer review of a
test method.
SEC. 3. INTERAGENCY COORDINATING COMMITTEE ON THE VALIDATION OF
ALTERNATIVE METHODS.
(a) In General.--With respect to the interagency coordinating
committee that is known as the Interagency Coordinating Committee on
the Validation of Alternative Methods (referred to in this Act as
``ICCVAM'') and that was established by the Director of the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences for purposes of section
463A(b) of the Public Health Service Act, the Director of the Institute
shall designate such committee as a permanent interagency coordinating
committee of the Institute under the National Toxicology Program
Interagency Center for the Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological
Methods. This Act may not be construed as affecting the authorities of
such Director regarding ICCVAM that were in effect on the day before
the date of the enactment of this Act, except to the extent
inconsistent with this Act.
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of the ICCVAM shall be to--
(1) increase the efficiency and effectiveness of Federal agency
test method review;
(2) eliminate unnecessary duplicative efforts and share
experiences between Federal regulatory agencies;
(3) optimize utilization of scientific expertise outside the
Federal Government;
(4) ensure that new and revised test methods are validated to
meet the needs of Federal agencies; and
(5) reduce, refine, or replace the use of animals in testing,
where feasible.
(c) Composition.--The ICCVAM shall be composed of the heads of the
following Federal agencies (or their designees):
(1) Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.
(2) Consumer Product Safety Commission.
(3) Department of Agriculture.
(4) Department of Defense.
(5) Department of Energy.
(6) Department of the Interior.
(7) Department of Transportation.
(8) Environmental Protection Agency.
(9) Food and Drug Administration.
(10) National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
(11) National Institutes of Health.
(12) National Cancer Institute.
(13) National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
(14) National Library of Medicine.
(15) Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
(16) Any other agency that develops, or employs tests or test
data using animals, or regulates on the basis of the use of animals
in toxicity testing.
(d) Scientific Advisory Committee.--
(1) Establishment.--The Director of the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences shall establish a Scientific Advisory
Committee (referred to in this Act as the ``SAC'') to advise ICCVAM
and the National Toxicology Program Interagency Center for the
Evaluation of Alternative Toxicological Methods regarding ICCVAM
activities. The activities of the SAC shall be subject to
provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
(2) Membership.--
(A) In general.--The SAC shall be composed of the following
voting members:
(i) At least one knowledgeable representative having a
history of expertise, development, or evaluation of new or
revised or alternative test methods from each of--
(I) the personal care, pharmaceutical, industrial
chemicals, or agriculture industry;
(II) any other industry that is regulated by the
Federal agencies specified in subsection (c); and
(III) a national animal protection organization
established under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.
(ii) Representatives (selected by the Director of the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences) from
an academic institution, a State government agency, an
international regulatory body, or any corporation
developing or marketing new or revised or alternative test
methodologies, including contract laboratories.
(B) Nonvoting ex officio members.--The membership of the
SAC shall, in addition to voting members under subparagraph
(A), include as nonvoting ex officio members the agency heads
specified in subsection (c) (or their designees).
(e) Duties.--The ICCVAM shall, consistent with the purposes
described in subsection (b), carry out the following functions:
(1) Review and evaluate new or revised or alternative test
methods, including batteries of tests and test screens, that may be
acceptable for specific regulatory uses, including the coordination
of technical reviews of proposed new or revised or alternative test
methods of interagency interest.
(2) Facilitate appropriate interagency and international
harmonization of acute or chronic toxicological test protocols that
encourage the reduction, refinement, or replacement of animal test
methods.
(3) Facilitate and provide guidance on the development of
validation criteria, validation studies and processes for new or
revised or alternative test methods and help facilitate the
acceptance of such scientifically valid test methods and awareness
of accepted test methods by Federal agencies and other
stakeholders.
(4) Submit ICCVAM test recommendations for the test method
reviewed by the ICCVAM, through expeditious transmittal by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services (or the designee of the
Secretary), to each appropriate Federal agency, along with the
identification of specific agency guidelines, recommendations, or
regulations for a test method, including batteries of tests and
test screens, for chemicals or class of chemicals within a
regulatory framework that may be appropriate for scientific
improvement, while seeking to reduce, refine, or replace animal
test methods.
(5) Consider for review and evaluation, petitions received from
the public that--
(A) identify a specific regulation, recommendation, or
guideline regarding a regulatory mandate; and
(B) recommend new or revised or al
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ternative test methods
and provide valid scientific evidence of the potential of the
test method.
(6) Make available to the public final ICCVAM test
recommendations to appropriate Federal agencies and the responses
from the agencies regarding such recommendations.
(7) Prepare reports to be made available to the public on its
progress under this Act. The first report shall be completed not
later than 12 months after the date of the enactment of this Act,
and subsequent reports shall be completed biennially thereafter.
SEC. 4. FEDERAL AGENCY ACTION.
(a) Identification of Tests.--With respect to each Federal agency
carrying out a program that requires or recommends acute or chronic
toxicological testing, such agency shall, not later than 180 days after
receiving an ICCVAM test recommendation, identify and forward to the
ICCVAM any relevant test method specified in a regulation or industry-
wide guideline which specifically, or in practice requires, recommends,
or encourages the use of an animal acute or chronic toxicological test
method for which the ICCVAM test recommendation may be added or
substituted.
(b) Alternatives.--Each Federal agency carrying out a program
described in subsection (a) shall promote and encourage the development
and use of alternatives to animal test methods (including batteries of
tests and test screens), where appropriate, for the purpose of
complying with Federal statutes, regulations, guidelines, or
recommendations (in each instance, and for each chemical class) if such
test methods are found to be effective for generating data, in an
amount and of a scientific value that is at least equivalent to the
data generated from existing tests, for hazard identification, dose-
response assessment, or risk assessment purposes.
(c) Test Method Validation.--Each Federal agency carrying out a
program described in subsection (a) shall ensure that any new or
revised acute or chronic toxicity test method, including animal test
methods and alternatives, is determined to be valid for its proposed
use prior to requiring, recommending, or encouraging the application of
such test method.
(d) Review.--Not later than 180 days after receipt of an ICCVAM
test recommendation, a Federal agency carrying out a program described
in subsection (a) shall review such recommendation and notify the
ICCVAM in writing of its findings.
(e) Recommendation Adoption.--Each Federal agency carrying out a
program described in subsection (a), or its specific regulatory unit or
units, shall adopt the ICCVAM test recommendation unless such Federal
agency determines that--
(1) the ICCVAM test recommendation is not adequate in terms of
biological relevance for the regulatory goal authorized by that
agency, or mandated by Congress;
(2) the ICCVAM test recommendation does not generate data, in
an amount and of a scientific value that is at least equivalent to
the data generated prior to such recommendation, for the
appropriate hazard identification, dose-response assessment, or
risk assessment purposes as the current test method recommended or
required by that agency;
(3) the agency does not employ, recommend, or require testing
for that class of chemical or for the recommended test endpoint; or
(4) the ICCVAM test recommendation is unacceptable for
satisfactorily fulfilling the test needs for that particular agency
and its respective congressional mandate.
SEC. 5. APPLICATION.
(a) Application.--This Act shall not apply to research, including
research performed using biotechnology techniques, or research related
to the causes, diagnosis, treatment, control, or prevention of physical
or mental diseases or impairments of humans or animals.
(b) Use of Test Methods.--Nothing in this Act shall prevent a
Federal agency from retaining final authority for incorporating the
test methods recommended by the ICCVAM in the manner determined to be
appropriate by such Federal agency or regulatory body.
(c) Limitation.--Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require
a manufacturer that is currently not required to perform animal testing
to perform such tests. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to
require a manufacturer to perform redundant endpoint specific testing.
(d) Submission of Tests and Data.--Nothing in this Act precludes a
party from submitting a test method or scientific data directly to a
Federal agency for use in a regulatory program.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate.
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