1 / 19

Extramural Program and Funding Opportunities: NCI

Extramural Program and Funding Opportunities: NCI. David H. Harpole, Jr., M.D. Professor of Surgery Vice Chief of Surgical Sciences Department of Surgery Duke University Medical Center. NIH Funding by Adjusted Life-years. Gross et al. NEJM 340 (24): 1881, 1999.

saniya
Download Presentation

Extramural Program and Funding Opportunities: NCI

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extramural Program and Funding Opportunities: NCI David H. Harpole, Jr., M.D. Professor of Surgery Vice Chief of Surgical Sciences Department of Surgery Duke University Medical Center

  2. NIH Funding by Adjusted Life-years Gross et al. NEJM 340 (24): 1881, 1999

  3. NIH Funding by Disease Mortality Rate Disease Deaths/100,000* NIH funding** HIV-AIDS 4.0 $2,900,000,000 Colo-Rectal Cancer 19.6 $295,000,000 Breast Cancer (female) 25.5 $693,000,000 Prostate Cancer 28.1 $379,000,000 Lung Cancer 54.9 $296,000,000 * 2007 CDC, United States (Table 1.1.1.2MF); ** 2008 NIH

  4. Research supported by NCI • Basic Science Studies • Translational Science Studies • Clinical Investigations and Clinical Trials • Population-based studies • Demonstration and Education Projects

  5. Unique Aspects of NCI The Good… • Largest Institute (Budget $6B+) • $2.1B Supplement in Stimulus Package • Note: $6B more in 2011 Budget by Obama 3/1/10 • Note: Not approved by Democrats, certainly not by Republicans • Only Institute with Political Appointment (Forces change) • 50+ year history of significant Clinical Trials Support • CALGB, SWOG, ECOG,, RTOG, NCCTG, ACOSOG, COG, GOG, NCI-C, EORTC (more on this later…) • Developed Secondary endpoints:, Quality of Life, Costs

  6. Cooperative Cancer Groups • IOM report recommended streamlining process to improve efficiency and accrual • 9 current adult groups will be 3 (maybe 4) • Applications due 6/2012, funding 1/2013 • ACOSOG/CALGB/NCCTG merged • Leadership opportunities for GTS • Other groups are “dating”

  7. Unique Aspects of NCI The Bad… • The vast majority of $ earmarked for administrative grants • Cancer Center, Cooperative groups, PO1, SPORE, EDRN, etc. • An opportunity exists as this is evolving from single to multiple institution, multiple PI format • Historically lowest pay-line (Now 8-9th percentile) • e.g., CBSS 180 R21, 5 funded 2011, RO1 at 10% • No modality-specific study sections • Exception: Radiation Biology and Imaging • TS projects are mixed in with all scientists for review • 6 RO1 funded GTS by NCI • 2 GTS on NCI-CSR study sections

  8. Unique Aspects of NCI • Intra-and Extramural Programs Re-organized Based on Disease Steering Committees • Thoracic Malignacy Steering Committee • GI Tumor Steering Committee • Membership: Modality Co-chairs • Scientists (SPORE, PO1) • Clinical Investigators (Cooperative Group Disease Chairs) • Community Oncology members • Advocates • NCI Intramural scientists • Missions: • Streamlining Approval of all Phase II and III Clinical Trials • Oversee accrual and DSMB’s • Designing “State of the Science” Meeting to define future research funding objectives • Facilitate Interactions across disciplines

  9. NCI Funding Opportunities • Websites: http://grants.nih.gov http://cancer.gov • Major grant types • Research • Single project • Multi-project • Clinical Trial Support • Training and Career Development • Small Business

  10. Request for Applications (RFA) • Specific theme for grants, often from recommendations SOS meetings • Sent to question-specific study section • RFA’s Located on NIH website • Monies are be appropriated • Many R21’s are from these • But...limited number to be funded • Often “pre-determined”

  11. Program Announcements (PA’s) • Invites grant applications in a specific research area • New or expanded interest in an area, or a reminder of an ongoing interest • Usually No money! • Reviewers note that a grant is responsive to a particular PA

  12. Research Applications • R01: Standard Research Grant for “investigator initiated research” • Single project 2-4 years • 5th year now by special approval • New and established investigators • Can have Multiple PI’s • Each PI has defined role and grant credit • A real advantage to synergy • Traditional “benchtop” basic scientist • Translational / clinical scientist

  13. Research Applications • R21: Exploratory/Developmental Grant • Early and conceptual stages of development • 2 years of funding capped at $275K • Great initial grant: requires no preliminary data • Must have statistical input • R33 validation (3 years) capped at $500K/year • P01: program project grant (and SPORE) • Thematic • Multi-project (requires R01 funded leaders)

  14. Training and Career Development • All Levels of Education and Experience • Specials Programs for under-represented populations and researchers with disabilities • Basic science and clinical research

  15. Career Development Awards (K’s) • K08: Mentored Clinical Scientist • Health Professional Doctoral Degree • Not necessarily clinical research • K23: Mentored Patient-Oriented Research • Analogous to K08 • Develop skills for patient-oriented research • K12 is Center-based K08 or K23 • K24: Mid-career Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research • K99: Pathway to independence (R00) • Transitions to RO1 in latter years Note: NCI requires 75% protected non-clinical time!!!

  16. CSR – NCI Study Sections:Oncology 1 Basic Translational (OBT IRG) Cancer initiation, promotion, progression, metastasis • Cancer Molecular Pathobiology Study Section [CAMP] • Cancer Etiology Study Section [CE] • Cancer Genetics Study Section [CG] • Molecular Oncogenesis Study Section [MONC] • Tumor Cell Biology Study Section [TCB] • Tumor Microenvironment Study Section [TME] • Tumor Progression and Metastasis Study Section [TPM]

  17. CSR – NCI Study Sections:Oncology 1: Clinical Oncology (CO IRG) • Clinical patient-oriented research /clinical trials • Pharmacologic and toxicologic studies • Non-behavioral alternative cancer therapies • Research on the treatment of cancer therapy-related • Age-specific issues: tumor behavior with aging, clinical / laboratory assessment of the older patient • Basic Mechanisms of Cancer Therapeutics Study Section [BMCT] • Cancer Biomarkers Study Section [CBSS] • Chemo/Dietary Prevention Study Section [CDP] • Cancer Immunopathology and Immunotherapy Study Section [CII] • Clinical Oncology Study Section [CONC] • Drug Discovery and Molecular Pharmacology Study Section [DMP] • Developmental Therapeutics Study Section [DT] • Radiation Therapeutics and Biology Study Section [RTB]

  18. Application Process (E-forms) • Electronic forms are on the NIH web site • NIH Form 398 standard for most applications • www.grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/phs398/phs398.html • Prepare biosketch and other support NOW! • Each grant mechanism has a different submission deadline • R01/R21 submission • Application due February 1 for December 1 start • Application due June 1 for April 1 start • Application due October 1 for July 1 start

  19. NCI Grant Contact Information • Funded Investigators and Surgical Mentors • Institution Grants and Contracts office • Program staff at NIH • Each Institute has a web site with key personnel listed • Contact specific study section staff for questions • The NIH Guide to Grants and Contracts • www.grants.nih.gov/grants/guide • Lists special programs for which grants are being sought

More Related