Contact PD/PI: LLOYD-JONES, DONALD M ABSTRACT. The Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (NUCATS) serves as an integrated hub to advance Clinical and Translational Science (CTS) at three distinct scales: locally, at Northwestern University (NU) and our 3 nationally-renowned clinical partners; regionally, across Chicago and in collaboration with the other two Chicago CTSA hubs and our many community stakeholder partners; and, nationally, through our active participation in the CTSA Consortium. By leveraging continuous CTSA funding since 2008, as well as substantial financial and in-kind support from NU and our partners, NUCATS has succeeded at all three scales, evolving into a mature, balanced, highly-functioning CTSA with a broad portfolio of leading-edge programs spanning T0 through T4. Looking to the future, we recognize that there continue to be exciting strategic opportunities for innovation and improvement, and NUCATS is not afraid to experiment upon itself to achieve our mission of speeding transformative research discoveries to patients and the population, in order to improve human health. We will build on this legacy through five broad-based Global Objectives, which focus on: expanding and further integrating research into clinical care systems and processes, with the ultimate goal that every clinical encounter can be an opportunity for research participation, precision medicine, and learning to improve human health for all; accelerating local, regional, and national CTS by enhancing our existing integrated digital research infrastructure to develop and apply new, leading-edge informatics and data science tools to catalyze research, education, collaboration, engagement, evaluation, and dissemination; broadening our community and stakeholder engagement and advance team science to enable high-functioning, stakeholder-engaged, multi-disciplinary research teams that have impact across the spectrum of CTS; developing, demonstrating, disseminating, and adopting innovative and sustainable CTS methods and processes to accelerate translation and foster a culture of rigor, reproducibility, evaluation, and continuous improvement across the CTSA consortium; and innovating, testing, and disseminating novel training programs to cultivate, equip, and empower the diverse translational research workforce of tomorrow. We propose to leverage CTSA funding to address key strategic opportunities and critical barriers to CTS, not only at NUCATS, but across Chicagoland and the CTSA consortium. In doing so, we anticipate that NUCATS will continue be a central player in the ongoing evolution of the role of CTSA Program in accelerating CTS to improve human health. Page 236 Project Summary/Abstract Contact PD/PI: LLOYD-JONES, DONALD M

Public Health Relevance

The mission of the Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Sciences (NUCATS) Institute is ?to speed transformative research discoveries to patients and the population, in order to improve human health.? NUCATS serves as the hub for clinical and translational research across Northwestern University and its clinical partners, Northwestern Memorial HealthCare, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children?s Hospital of Chicago, and the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab. In this funding period, NUCATS will build on its unique strengths to further integrate research into all aspects of clinical care, support all of our endeavors with our rich informatics and digital infrastructure, support inter-disciplinary teams that include community stakeholders evaluate and improve research methods, and train and equip the translational workforce. Page 237 Project Narrative

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Specialized Center Cooperative Agreement (UL1)
Project #
5UL1TR001422-06
Application #
9978145
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZTR1)
Program Officer
Wilde, David B
Project Start
2015-08-12
Project End
2024-06-30
Budget Start
2020-07-01
Budget End
2021-06-30
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Kadakia, Rachel; Scholtens, Denise M; Rouleau, Gerald W et al. (2018) Cord Blood Metabolites Associated with Newborn Adiposity and Hyperinsulinemia. J Pediatr 203:144-149.e1
VanWagner, Lisa B; Montag, Samantha; Zhao, Lihui et al. (2018) Cardiovascular Disease Outcomes Related to Early Stage Renal Impairment After Liver Transplantation. Transplantation 102:1096-1107
Mugler, Emily M; Tate, Matthew C; Livescu, Karen et al. (2018) Differential Representation of Articulatory Gestures and Phonemes in Precentral and Inferior Frontal Gyri. J Neurosci 38:9803-9813
Major, Matthew J; Serba, Chelsi K; Chen, Xinlin et al. (2018) Proactive Locomotor Adjustments Are Specific to Perturbation Uncertainty in Below-Knee Prosthesis Users. Sci Rep 8:1863
Souza, Pamela; Wright, Richard; Gallun, Frederick et al. (2018) Reliability and Repeatability of the Speech Cue Profile. J Speech Lang Hear Res 61:2126-2137
Isakova, Tamara; Cai, Xuan; Lee, Jungwha et al. (2018) Longitudinal FGF23 Trajectories and Mortality in Patients with CKD. J Am Soc Nephrol 29:579-590
Hadden, Kristie B; Arnold, Connie L; Curtis, Laura M et al. (2018) Rationale and development of a randomized pragmatic trial to improve diabetes outcomes in patient-centered medical homes serving rural patients. Contemp Clin Trials 73:152-157
Poornima, I G; Shields, K; Kuller, L H et al. (2018) Associations of osteoprotegerin with coronary artery calcification among women with systemic lupus erythematosus and healthy controls. Lupus :961203317751060
Lai, H Henry; Naliboff, Bruce; Liu, Alice B et al. (2018) The LURN Research Network Neuroimaging and Sensory Testing (NIST) Study: Design, protocols, and operations. Contemp Clin Trials 74:76-87
Xiang, Xiaoling; Robinson-Lane, Sheria G; Rosenberg, Walter et al. (2018) Implementing and sustaining evidence-based practice in health care: The Bridge Model experience. J Gerontol Soc Work 61:280-294

Showing the most recent 10 out of 569 publications