This is a resubmission for a NIH Pathway to Independence Career Development Award (# 1K99 NR011054-01). The candidate for this award is Jennifer R. Dungan, PhD, RN, a Senior Research Associate at the DukeUniversity School of Nursing and Duke Center for Aging/John A. Hartford Junior Faculty Fellow. Drs. William E.Kraus, Elizabeth R. Hauser, Svati H. Shah, and Catherine L. Gilliss will serve as co-mentors during thementored phase of this award. The overarching goal of this proposal is for the candidate to build a researchprogram in the genetics of survivorship in coronary artery disease, a research program that combines herinterests in aging, cardiovascular disease, and genetics. Dr. Dungan has established the phenotype forsurvivorship in coronary artery disease in two existing databases (the Duke CATHeterization GENetics[CATHGEN] and the Framingham Heart studies) and has performed pilot analysis to identify survival and agebiases in these datasets. In order to effectively study the genetics of survivorship in coronary artery disease, itis necessary to first understand the impact of survival and age biases on gene associations with coronaryartery disease and control for their effects. Her proposed mentored research seeks to extensively characterizethese biases in both datasets, then test traditional and complex statistical methods to control for such biases ingene associations with coronary artery disease. The independent phase research seeks to identify otherepidemiological datasets to further characterize the scope of such biases and test the statistical methods fromthe mentored phase. Results from these aims will inform the proper development of a pilot study of aprospective, epidemiological investigation of the genetics of survivorship in coronary artery disease (finalindependent phase aim). Dr. Dungan's training plan includes strengthening her background in geneticepidemiology, statistical genetics, and statistical handling of time-related effects. Given the candidate's strongbackground in genetics and her experience with research projects in cardiovascular aging and genomics, astrong epidemiological and statistical knowledge base will enhance her future productivity and potential in thiscompetitive field. The goal is that from this research, heart disease patients may be better screened andidentified for genetic risk and/or protective genes, potentially leading to prevention of heart-disease-relatedevents and promotion of healthy survival.

Public Health Relevance

Many genes have been identified for heart disease. The impact of genetic variation may vary by age and our ability to detect these effects may be impacted by who survives to be in the study. If there are genes specifically related to surviving with heart disease, they may be important to understanding risk for heart attacks and death and can also provide information about genetic protection against these risks. This research may help improve health outcomes and survival for people with heart disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Type
Research Transition Award (R00)
Project #
4R00NR011054-03
Application #
8298712
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (NSS)
Program Officer
Huss, Karen
Project Start
2011-08-05
Project End
2014-06-30
Budget Start
2011-08-05
Budget End
2012-06-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$245,366
Indirect Cost
Name
Duke University
Department
Type
Schools of Nursing
DUNS #
044387793
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27705
Dungan, Jennifer R; Qin, Xuejun; Horne, Benjamin D et al. (2016) Case-Only Survival Analysis Reveals Unique Effects of Genotype, Sex, and Coronary Disease Severity on Survivorship. PLoS One 11:e0154856