Contact PD/PI: Coller, Barry The overall vision of the Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS), supported by the CTSA program, is to develop, demonstrate, and disseminate innovative programs to achieve translational success and to integrate these into a seamless ?Learning Clinical Research Enterprise? that uses outcome data to drive quality improvement for the benefit of human health. To achieve this vision we will enhance our existing programs and add new ones.
Specific aims : 1. To integrate our existing and new programs into a Translational Research Navigation (TRN) Program that encourages, facilitates, and insures the integrity of all human subjects research from conception to conclusion, and that will expedite our participation in the CTSA network of multi-center studies. 2. To integrate our existing and new programs into a Translational Workforce Educational Program that insures that all members of the translational workforce have the knowledge and skills required for them to perform their functions individually and as members of diverse scientific teams. 3. To integrate our existing and new programs into a From Discovery to Health- Enhancing Product Program to insure that investigators have the resources to maximize the likelihood that they can translate their novel discoveries into products that improve human health. To achieve this vision, we will: 1. Integrate our Community Engaged Navigation, Protocol Navigation, Research Participant Engagement in Protocol Priorities and Design, Basic Scientist Outreach, Mutually Aligned Community Engaged/ Mechanistic Science, Centralized Recruitment and Research Volunteer Repository, Ontology-Backed Phenotyping, and Research Participant Perception programs with a new Protocol Implementation Navigation program into an overarching TRN program under a new administrative structure with senior leadership. TRN will be supported by an integrated Informatics infrastructure adopting best practices and NIH and CTSA data standards. TRN will support both local protocols and CTSA network protocols with TRN leadership serving on the Liaisons to the Trial and Recruitment Innovation Centers. 2. Integrate our extensive current educational programs, including the KL2 Clinical Scholars program, with new educational initiatives to: prepare community clinicians to participate in research teams, enhance Clinical Research Nursing training, provide a full range of educational experiences in translating scientific discoveries into health-enhancing products, develop ontology-backed phenotyping instruments, and query large electronic health record databases to test scientific hypotheses at the population level. 3. Integrate the new Tri-Institutional Therapeutic Development Institute, which provides access to medicinal chemists and drug project management, with the CCTS Pilot program, the Rockefeller scientific resource centers, the New York Genome Center, the new Robertson Therapeutic Development Fund, the TRN program, and the CCTS Hospital to enable investigators to traverse the Valley of Death through Phase 1/2 studies. Outcome metrics will drive performance improvement throughout. Project Summary/Abstract Page 248 Contact PD/PI: Coller, Barry The Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science is dedicated to improving human health by providing resources and personnel to support the conduct of the highest quality research to improve the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of human disease, as well as to inform and implement public health policy. It will also produce novel methods to improve both the scientific information obtained in the studies and the way in which the research is performed.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Specialized Center Cooperative Agreement (UL1)
Project #
3UL1TR001866-03S1
Application #
9772654
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZTR1)
Program Officer
Merchant, Carol
Project Start
2016-07-05
Project End
2019-05-31
Budget Start
2018-06-01
Budget End
2019-05-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Rockefeller University
Department
Biology
Type
Graduate Schools
DUNS #
071037113
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10065
Tsuchida, Takuma; Lee, Youngmin A; Fujiwara, Naoto et al. (2018) A simple diet- and chemical-induced murine NASH model with rapid progression of steatohepatitis, fibrosis and liver cancer. J Hepatol 69:385-395
Lee, Youngmin A; Noon, Luke A; Akat, Kemal M et al. (2018) Autophagy is a gatekeeper of hepatic differentiation and carcinogenesis by controlling the degradation of Yap. Nat Commun 9:4962
Yan, Bernice Y; Garcet, Sandra; Gulati, Nicholas et al. (2018) Novel immune signatures associated with dysplastic nevi and primary cutaneous melanoma in human skin. Exp Dermatol :
Hernandez, Nicholas; Melki, Isabelle; Jing, Huie et al. (2018) Life-threatening influenza pneumonitis in a child with inherited IRF9 deficiency. J Exp Med 215:2567-2585
Bolze, Alexandre; Boisson, Bertrand; Bosch, Barbara et al. (2018) Incomplete penetrance for isolated congenital asplenia in humans with mutations in translated and untranslated RPSA exons. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E8007-E8016
Zhang, Shen-Ying; Clark, Nathaniel E; Freije, Catherine A et al. (2018) Inborn Errors of RNA Lariat Metabolism in Humans with Brainstem Viral Infection. Cell 172:952-965.e18
Meyers, Kathrine; Wu, Yumeng; Qian, Haoyu et al. (2018) Interest in Long-Acting Injectable PrEP in a Cohort of Men Who have Sex with Men in China. AIDS Behav 22:1217-1227
Zhang, Lei; Peng, Peng; Wu, Yumeng et al. (2018) Modelling the Epidemiological Impact and Cost-Effectiveness of PrEP for HIV Transmission in MSM in China. AIDS Behav :
Casanova, Jean-Laurent; Abel, Laurent (2018) Human genetics of infectious diseases: Unique insights into immunological redundancy. Semin Immunol 36:1-12
Kimble, Danielle C; Lach, Francis P; Gregg, Siobhan Q et al. (2018) A comprehensive approach to identification of pathogenic FANCA variants in Fanconi anemia patients and their families. Hum Mutat 39:237-254

Showing the most recent 10 out of 66 publications