The Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Consortium at the University of Texas-Houston Medical School has a major commitment to multicenter clinical investigation. The PI, Charles Cox, M.D., is the Children's Fund for Pediatric Trauma Associate Professor of Surgery and Pediatrics and the Co-PI, Kevin Lally, M.D., the A.G. McNeese Professor and Chief of Pediatric Surgery. The TBI consortium has a track record for identifying and recruiting TBI patients for clinical studies across multiple points of care. The PI and Co-PI are board certified in both pediatric surgery and surgical critical care, which allows control of the acute care management of TBI patients. The group also includes a nationally recognized inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation center (The Institute for Rehabilitation and Research, TIRR). TIRR admits approximately 750 patients per year and has a 36-bed inpatient brain injury unit. TIRR also has a track record of NIH/NIDRR funded clinical research involving TBI patients. Post-rehabilitation outcomes follow-up is an established and mature component of the TBI component with outcome studies since 1982. Longitudinal studies of children with TBI are now in their 5th-9th year. UT-Houston provides: (A) A large patient population - Approximately 4,500 patients are admitted to the UT-Houston/Memorial Hermann Trauma Service per year (958 with a GCS of < 12), of which 1,400 are pediatric patients (167 with a GCS <12 between the ages 12-21). This application offers the rare combination of expertise in the management of patients with severe TBI and a very large, eligible patient population. (B) Methodological and multidisciplinary expertise - The Pls have extensive experience in basic and clinical research. The TBI team members have a unique combination of clinical expertise across the continuum of acute care, combined with extensive experience in TBI clinical intervention protocols, rehabilitation and the design of neuropsychiatric developmental outcome measures within the institution. (C) Supportive leadership and institutional commitment - The departments in the TBI consortium have all demonstrated a commitment to the support of collaborative clinical research. This is evidenced by the large number of past and ongoing multicenter trials and the establishment of the two NICHD-funded clinical research (Neonatal Intensive Care Units and Maternal Fetal Medicine Units) networks at UT-Houston. There is an active NIH sponsored Clinical Research Curriculum and Mentorship Program (K30 HL 04137) designed to train clinical investigators as well as a University Clinical Research Center (M01 RR02558) with a track record in clinical research.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
1R21HD042659-01A1
Application #
6631388
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHD1-RRG-K (BI))
Program Officer
Nicholson, Carol E
Project Start
2003-08-08
Project End
2005-07-31
Budget Start
2003-08-08
Budget End
2004-07-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$111,375
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas Health Science Center Houston
Department
Surgery
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
800771594
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77225
Cox Jr, Charles S; Baumgartner, James E; Harting, Matthew T et al. (2011) Autologous bone marrow mononuclear cell therapy for severe traumatic brain injury in children. Neurosurgery 68:588-600
Walker, Peter A; Jimenez, Fernando; Cox Jr, Charles S (2010) Progenitor cell therapy for traumatic brain injury: effect of serum osmolarity on cell viability and cytokine production. Regen Med 5:65-71
Harting, Matthew T; Jimenez, Fernando; Xue, Hasan et al. (2009) Intravenous mesenchymal stem cell therapy for traumatic brain injury. J Neurosurg 110:1189-97
Fischer, Uwe M; Harting, Matthew T; Jimenez, Fernando et al. (2009) Pulmonary passage is a major obstacle for intravenous stem cell delivery: the pulmonary first-pass effect. Stem Cells Dev 18:683-92
Harting, Matthew T; Jimenez, Fernando; Cox Jr, Charles S (2009) Isolation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from green fluorescent protein positive (GFP+) transgenic rodents: the grass is not always green(er). Stem Cells Dev 18:127-35
Harting, Matthew T; Sloan, Leeann E; Jimenez, Fernando et al. (2009) Subacute neural stem cell therapy for traumatic brain injury. J Surg Res 153:188-94
Harting, Matthew T; Jimenez, Fernando; Adams, Sasha D et al. (2008) Acute, regional inflammatory response after traumatic brain injury: Implications for cellular therapy. Surgery 144:803-13