69 Grants To Support A Broad Spectrum Of Scientific Research

() has been awarded $38.2 million in funding from the (NIH) as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). scientists received a total of 69 grants across all medical-center departments, including surgery, neurology, pathology and a of divisions within the Department of Medicine including cardiology, hematology/oncology, nephrology, gastroenterology and geriatrics.

“This level of funding is a very impressive achievement and speaks to the high caliber of ’s research program,” says Vikas Sukhatme, MD, PhD. “Virtually every department and division received grants encompassing all types of research: basic, translational and clinical.”

The NIH awarded a total of $5 billion in grants as part of the overall $100 billion federal . “At a time when were declining significantly, this ARRA funding is a true stimulus to ,” adds Sukhatme. “These 69 new grants strengthen ’s already strong research program, which has consistently ranked in the top four in NIH funding among nationwide for more than 10 years running.”

Among the grants received by was an award of $1.6 million to Dan Barouch, MD, PhD, Chief of ’s Division of Vaccine Research to continue his investigations of novel candidates. Also notable, , MD, PhD, Associate Director of Research for ’s Cancer Center was awarded a grant of $2.1 million a year for two years for his work developing a new paradigm for conducting clinical trials to test cancer therapies.

In addition, scientists received a total of eight NIH . These two-year grants were specifically created as part of the Recovery Act funding, and focus on “challenge topics” that address biomedical research challenges that will benefit from “jumpstart” funds.

“Like other funding in the federal , these grants are designed to have broad applications to the population as a whole,” notes Randy Mason, Vice President of Research Operations. “The projects that were funded represent a wide range of subject areas, from investigations into the causes of cancers and cardiac diseases to the development of new technologies to help individuals better manage sleep apnea and heal broken bones.” (To see an entire list of -funded projects visit http://projectreporter.nih.gov/reporter_SearchResults.cfm.)

’s eight include the following:

  • Mary Bouxsein, PhD, of ’s Center for Advanced Orthopaedic Studies received a grant of more than $950,000 over two years to investigate the effects of perinatal calorie restriction or high-fat diet on the acquisition of bone mass and strength in mice to determine its influence on adult bone disease;
  • Christopher Evans, PhD, Director of the Center for Advanced Orthopaedic Studies, received a grant totaling $980,186 over two years to work with ’s Orthopaedic Trauma team to develop innovative ways to heal broken bones — which are more efficient and less expensive than existing methods;
  • , MD, PhD, Associate Director of Research of ’s Cancer Center, was awarded a Challenge grant of $1 million over two years for his investigations of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), an incurable life-threatening disorder;
  • Jeffrey Saffitz, MD, PhD, Chairman of ’s Department of Pathology, will study a heart disease that carries the greatest known risk of sudden cardiac death, a major public health plague. He was awarded a Challenge Grant of $975,551 over two years;
  • Martin Sanda, MD, Director of ’s Prostate Cancer Program, has received two of $1 million each over two years. The first grant will compare long-term side effects, cancer control, and health-care costs of different treatments for early-stage prostate cancer; the second will evaluate whether the use of robotic assistance improves quality and consistency of prostate cancer surgery;
  • Ralph Scully, MB, BS, PhD, of ’s Division of Hematology/Oncology was awarded a two-year Challenge Grant totaling over $1 million to examine defects in double strand break (DSB) repair, which are known to be common in human cancers and offer a potential new target for cancer therapies. New tools developed in the Scully laboratory will allow investigators to rapidly screen the human genome for new genes that regulate DSB repair;
  • Robert Thomas, MD, of the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine received a two-year grant totaling $1 million to test a new method of assessing sleep quality based on changes in the speed of a person’s heart beat and breathing-related factors. Thomas will assess the usefulness of this method as a monitor of sleep health among patients with complicated forms of sleep apnea and patients with heart failure.

Source:
Bonnie Prescott

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