IRB, Office of Research Development COOK COUNTY BUREAU OF HEALTH SERVICES
Office of Research Development

      
Sunday, Feb 05, 2012
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NIH PROGRAM TO SUPPORT CLINICIAN-RESEARCHERS
 
Over the years, the National Institutes of Health has been criticized for favoring basic biomedical research in its funding decisions, to the detriment of proposals for clinically-oriented research. In 1995 a special panel was appointed by Harold Varmus, Director of NIH, to study this widespread perception, and to make recommendations about how to remedy the disparity if it was found to exist.

In December, 1997, the panel submitted its report and recommendations, which have now resulted in several new grant initiatives. While the panel did not agree that clinical research was disproportionately underfunded, it did recommend mandating more balanced composition of review groups and new funding to train clinicians to do research.

The working definition of "clinical research" used by the panel was in three parts:

(a) Patient-oriented research. Research conducted with human subjects (or on material of human origin such as tissues, specimens and cognitive phenomena) for which an investigator (or colleague) directly interacts with human subjects. This area of research includes:
  • Mechanisms of human disease
  • Therapeutic interventions
  • Clinical trials.
  • Development of new technologies
(b) Epidemiologic and behavioral studies
(c) Outcomes research and health services research.
Excluded from this definition are in vitro studies that utilize human tissues but do not deal directly with patients. In other words, clinical or patient-oriented research is research in which it is necessary to know the identity of the patients from whom the cells or tissues under study are derived.

Using this definition, the panel indexed all competing awards for FY 1996 according to the use of human subjects, classification as clinical research and whether they fall into the subset of clinical trials. The table below summarizes this data.

Category # of Projects Total dollars
All Competing Projects 10,493 $2,361,434,220
Human Subjects 3,665 (35%) $1,139,061,717 (48%)
Clinical Research 2,795 (27%) $905,852,246 (38%)
Clinical Trials 518 (5%) $313,435,513 (13%)

The panel also reported that the ratio of M.D. to Ph.D. applicants for NIH support has progressively fallen over the past thirty years even though success rates for the two types of applicants are similar. Importantly, the absolute number of M.D. applicants has fallen further in the past three years. Furthermore, M.D.s who fail to achieve fundable priority scores from study sections following their initial applications are less likely to reapply than Ph.Ds. The panel concluded that this represents a dispirited attitude among M.D. faculty members that bodes ill for the future of academic medicine and the public's health.

PANEL RECOMMENDATIONS

The panel made these ten recommendations:

  • The NIH should continue to monitor and track the percentage of NIH resources devoted to clinical research and report these results annually.
  • The NIH must ensure fair and effective reviews of extramural grant applications for support of clinical research: panels that review clinical research (a) must include experienced clinical investigators and (b) at least 30-50% of the applications reviewed by these panels must be for clinical research.
  • The NIH should initiate training programs that will enhance the attractiveness of careers in clinical research to medical students.
  • The NIH should improve the quality of training for clinical researchers by requiring grantee organizations to provide formal training experiences in clinical research and careful mentoring by experienced clinical investigators.
  • The NIH should initiate substantial new support mechanisms for young and mid-term clinical investigators.
  • A loan repayment program for clinical investigators should be instituted.
  • The scope of the General Clinical Research Centers should be broadened to enhance their leadership role in clinical research and research training and NIH should significantly increase its financial support of these centers.
  • The NIH should continue to improve the quality of clinical research and strengthen research management in the Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center (CC) and extend the availability of its resources and expertise, as well as those of the Institutes and Centers (ICs), to extramural investigators.
  • The NIH should sustain a productive dialogue on enhancing clinical research with its partners: the academic health centers, private foundations, and the pharmaceutical and managed health care industries.
  • The NIH should expand efforts to educate the public about the crucial importance of clinical research for the future health of the nation.
  • NEW GRANT INITIATIVES

    In response to the panel's recommendations, NIH has announced the availability of several new "K" award programs. These programs include:

    * Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Awards (K23, Grant Announcement PA-98-052) The purpose of the Mentored Patient-oriented Research Career Development Award (K23) is to support the career development of investigators who have made a commitment to focus their research endeavors on patient-oriented research. This mechanism provides support for a period of supervised study and research for clinically trained professionals who have the potential to develop into productive, clinical investigators focussing on patient-oriented research.

    * Midcareer Investigator Award In Patient- Oriented Research (K24, Grant Announcement PA-98-053) The purpose of the Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (K24) is to provide support for clinicians to allow them protected time to devote to patient-oriented research and to act as mentors for beginning clinical investigators. The target candidates are outstanding clinical scientists engaged in patient-oriented research who are within 15 years of their specialty training, who can demonstrate the need for a period of intensive research focus as a means of enhancing their clinical research careers, and who are committed to mentoring the next generation of clinical investigators focussing on patient-oriented research. The award is intended to further the research and mentoring endeavors of outstanding patient-oriented investigators, enable them to expand their potential to make significant contributions to their field of patient-oriented research, and to act as mentors for beginning clinicians.

    * New Clinical Associate Physician Award Guidelines (CAP) - The National Center for Research Resources has consolidated the three career development awards issued as competitive supplements to funded General Clinical Research Centers into one Clinical Associate Physician (CAP) award. No new applications for the Minority Clinical Associate Physician (MCAP) and Clinical Research Scholar (CRS) will be accepted.

     
     
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