Principal Investigator
IACUC FAQ: Principal Investigator (PI)
Only certain persons may be designated as the Principal Investigator on an animal research study or teaching protocol.
Eligibility to act as a University Principal Investigator or senior personnel on a project is a privilege typically limited to University employees (generally faculty members).
Non-faculty University Principal Investigators must hold an appropriate position or provide key expertise and should at least have a master’s degree to serve as a Principal Investigator, Project Director, Co-Principal Investigator, or other senior personnel on a sponsored project.
Students, staff, and individuals holding other appointment titles, such as research associate, specialist, post-doctoral fellow, visiting, adjunct, or clinical faculty, may be designated on the IACUC application as an additional investigator, but not as the PI.
In the case of graduate student research for theses or dissertations, the student’s major advisor or another faculty member should be designated on the IACUC application as the PI and the graduate student as an additional investigator.
An exception to the limitations discussed above may be granted in special circumstances. Approval is required from the unit head and the Vice President of Research and Innovation.
No. The IACUC does not have a specific limit on the number of studies for which a person accepts the role of PI. However, the individual should not accept this role unless he/she has the time, effort, and ability to maintain adequate oversight over the conduct of the study.
The PI is responsible for assessing the overall workload and resources to determine if he/she has the ability to oversee the study. However, the IACUC may review the number of open studies for which an individual is the PI on a case-by-case basis, particularly where adequate supervision is questioned.
Assessments should include the number of studies in active enrollment, number of local subject enrollment, complexity of the research studies overseen, risk level, overall number of studies overseen by the PI and additional time commitments to other university activities by the PI.
Yes. Delegation is permissible. However, delegation of tasks to study personnel does not relieve the PI of the responsibility for ensuring the rights, safety and welfare of animal subjects are protected and ensuring the study is conducted correctly and in accordance with the regulations, sponsor protocol/signed agreements, the IACUC-approved protocol, and TAMU-CC policies and procedures.
The PI cannot delegate the task to ensure the study is performed in compliance. The PI, regardless of which study staff member actually created the non-compliance or error, will be responsible for corrective actions.
The PI is responsible for ensuring tasks are delegated to appropriately trained, experienced and licensed personnel.
Study tasks must never be performed by persons not participating in the study or not approved by the sponsor and/or the IACUC.
When research tasks are delegated, the PI should:
- Properly document the delegation.
- Make study staff aware of terms and conditions of the award, requirements of the sponsor, federal, state, local laws, regulations, guidelines, and TAMU-CC policies that apply to the research activities to which staff are performing.
- Engage in education and make available resources to aide in staff performing their duties as assigned in compliance with all of the above, such as copies of the approved protocol, regulations, etc.
- Maintain proper supervision and oversight of the duties as assigned to ensure they are being performed properly.
- Keep a line of communication open for staff to raise questions, ask for additional training, and/or discuss and resolve issues that arise in the conduct of research activities.