Five years after its formation, the Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) at the Univeristy of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), the North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute (NC TraCS), has become the integrated, campus-wide home for clinical and translational research at UNC. The overall goal of this U54 Cooperative Agreement application is to combine the research strengths, resources and opportunities at UNC and new partner, RTI International (RTI), to build on the foundation established in the CTSA's last five years. NC TraCS will work to improve human health by accelerating clinical and translational research from health science discovery to dissemination to patients and communities. NC TraCS will strive to overcome the well-documented barriers to the effective, sustained translation of research discovery along the translational research continuum by improving efficiency, training a research workforce and exporting successful, validated methods developed in NC TraCS to other CTSA institutions and the public. The proposed CTSA will specifically (1) amplify a thriving CTSA program to the point that it supports the full spectrum of clinical and translational research;(2) leverage CTSA resources and institutional strengths to create a critical, sustained focus on three strategic initiatives: (a) next-generation technologies to transform the very nature of clinical research and practice, (b) new paradigms and resources to accelerate drug development, and (c) robust comparative effectiveness research studies to provide definitive evidence of the benefits and harms of tests and treatments;and (3) train, support and incentivize the next generation of clinical and translational science researchers. These goals will be accomplished by three resources, six services, integrated and streamlined from the original 11, and the three strategic initiatives. UNC and RTI now have a unique set of research and training resources to support the full range of clinical and translational research, from basic science to clinical application to policy change. NC TraCS will leverage the opportunity of this CTSA application to garner >$60 million dollars in matching institutional support to extend our capabilities to meet the three aims. In partnership with RTI, NC TraCS will take advantage of the resources it has created and nourished during the past five years to quickly and effectively bring the fruits of research to patients across the state, as well as nationally through the CTSA Consortium.

Public Health Relevance

Researchers, clinicians and health policy experts have long lamented the well-documented lag between basic science discoveries and when those discoveries reach patients to treat them and make their lives better. The proposed UNC-RTI partnership in cooperation with the CTSA Consortium will help to ensure that patients will more quickly and effectively benefit from the results of biomedical research.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Training Award (TL1)
Project #
1TL1TR001110-01
Application #
8721096
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1-PTM-C (S1))
Program Officer
Wilde, David B
Project Start
2013-09-26
Project End
2018-04-30
Budget Start
2013-09-26
Budget End
2014-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$169,609
Indirect Cost
$8,714
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
608195277
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Broadwater, Margaret A; Lee, Sung-Ho; Yu, Yang et al. (2018) Adolescent alcohol exposure decreases frontostriatal resting-state functional connectivity in adulthood. Addict Biol 23:810-823
Kinlaw, Alan C; Jonsson Funk, Michele; Conover, Mitchell M et al. (2018) Impact of New Medications and $4 Generic Programs on Overactive Bladder Treatment Among Older Adults in the United States, 2000-2015. Med Care 56:162-170
Lund, Jennifer L; Sanoff, Hanna K; Peacock Hinton, Sharon et al. (2018) Potential Medication-Related Problems in Older Breast, Colon, and Lung Cancer Patients in the United States. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 27:41-49
Hornik, Christoph P; Onufrak, Nikolas J; Smith, P Brian et al. (2018) Association between oral sildenafil dosing, predicted exposure, and systemic hypotension in hospitalised infants. Cardiol Young 28:85-92
Zègre-Hemsey, Jessica K; Bogle, Brittany; Cunningham, Christopher J et al. (2018) Delivery of Automated External Defibrillators (AED) by Drones: Implications for Emergency Cardiac Care. Curr Cardiovasc Risk Rep 12:
Santos Jr, Hudson P; Nephew, Benjamin C; Bhattacharya, Arjun et al. (2018) Discrimination exposure and DNA methylation of stress-related genes in Latina mothers. Psychoneuroendocrinology 98:131-138
Sleath, Betsy; Carpenter, Delesha M; Davis, Scott A et al. (2018) Improving youth question-asking and provider education during pediatric asthma visits. Patient Educ Couns 101:1051-1057
Shea, Christopher M; Turner, Kea; Albritton, Jordan et al. (2018) Contextual factors that influence quality improvement implementation in primary care: The role of organizations, teams, and individuals. Health Care Manage Rev 43:261-269
Leeman, Jennifer; Beeber, Linda; Hodges, Eric et al. (2018) Engaging national and regional partners to accelerate broad-scale implementation of nurse-developed interventions. Nurs Outlook 66:18-24
Kulis, Michael; Yue, Xiaohong; Guo, Rishu et al. (2018) High- and low-dose oral immunotherapy similarly suppress pro-allergic cytokines and basophil activation in young children. Clin Exp Allergy :

Showing the most recent 10 out of 44 publications