To fulfill tlie new NCATS vision for the CTSA Consortium and accelerate scientific discoveries into improved outcomes for patients, academic health and science systems must invest, transform, and innovate to optimize their unique strengths. Our vision, aligned with that of NCATS, is to create a research environment at Duke that stimulates the translation of scientific discovery from bench to bedside by 1) linking discovery science to a creative engine that efficiently accelerates development of new technologies; and 2) integrating clinical trials, registries, and electronic health records in a learning health system where research and practice form a continuum. Our research environment will be driven by scientific merit and societal need, agnostic to disease or specialty discipline, aligned with our updated institutional framework for research oversight and quality, and continually evaluated for academic productivity, efficiency, and cost. To achieve these goals, we will create an Integrated Home for clinical and translational research by providing infrastructure and resources to serve investigators and trainees across the research spectrum. We will offer resources based upon common needs among our researchers, including education, biostatistics, biobanking, regulatory expertise, ethics, pilot funding and recruitment assistance. We will also tailor our offerings to specialized needs across research communities that include early translation, proof of concept, site-based research and population based research, which includes multi-site trials, outcomes, health services, implementation science and community engaged research. Integrating these resources will require a new tool, a portal for all trainees and investigators, MyResearchHome@Duke, and its human counterpart, MyResearchTeam@Duke. These tools will provide a single point of entry for all clinical and translational research at Duke, regardless of their department or school. Thus, we will enhance our Integrated Home for clinical and translational research with a combination of sophisticated information technology and mentoring and navigation; provide access to common and specialized resources for all of our translational research communities and train the next generation of researchers in our educational and training programs.

Public Health Relevance

The CTSA will foster the translational research process, ensuring that new discoveries are developed and evaluated more quickly and that clinical research is done with high quality, efficiency, safety and cost- effectiveness.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Specialized Center Cooperative Agreement (UL1)
Project #
5UL1TR001117-05
Application #
9263765
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1-PTM-C (S1))
Program Officer
Urv, Tiina K
Project Start
2013-09-26
Project End
2018-04-30
Budget Start
2017-05-01
Budget End
2018-04-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
$7,939,043
Indirect Cost
$2,882,328
Name
Duke University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
044387793
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27705
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
Bartlett, David B; Willis, Leslie H; Slentz, Cris A et al. (2018) Ten weeks of high-intensity interval walk training is associated with reduced disease activity and improved innate immune function in older adults with rheumatoid arthritis: a pilot study. Arthritis Res Ther 20:127
Watt, Kevin M; Avant, Debbie; Sherwin, Jennifer et al. (2018) Effect of renal function on antihypertensive drug safety and efficacy in children. Pediatr Nephrol 33:139-146
Cohen, Seth M; Lee, Hui-Jie; Roy, Nelson et al. (2018) Pharmacologic management of voice disorders by general medicine providers and otolaryngologists. Laryngoscope 128:682-689
Carvalho, Erik; Bettger, Janet P; Bowlby, Lynn et al. (2018) Integration of musculoskeletal physical therapy care in the patient-centred medical home (IMPaC): protocol for a single-site randomised clinical trial. BMJ Open 8:e022953
Lowe, Jared R; Yu, Yinxi; Wolf, Steven et al. (2018) A Cohort Study of Patient-Reported Outcomes and Healthcare Utilization in Acute Myeloid Leukemia Patients Receiving Active Cancer Therapy in the Last Six Months of Life. J Palliat Med 21:592-597
Toleman, Clifford A; Schumacher, Maria A; Yu, Seok-Ho et al. (2018) Structural basis of O-GlcNAc recognition by mammalian 14-3-3 proteins. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:5956-5961
Ibrahim, Mohamed M; Poveromo, Luke P; Glisson, Richard R et al. (2018) Modifying hernia mesh design to improve device mechanical performance and promote tension-free repair. J Biomech 71:43-51
Gulack, Brian C; Greenberg, Rachel; Clark, Reese H et al. (2018) A multi-institution analysis of predictors of timing of inguinal hernia repair among premature infants. J Pediatr Surg 53:784-788
Allen, T K; Mishriky, B M; Klinger, R Y et al. (2018) The impact of neuraxial clonidine on postoperative analgesia and perioperative adverse effects in women having elective Caesarean section-a systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Anaesth 120:228-240

Showing the most recent 10 out of 326 publications