One of the most challenging aspects of today’s health care system is
the time it takes for a promising new treatment to become accessible to
those who need it.
MUSC joins 39 previously funded academic medical research institutions
within a national network working together to reduce the time it takes
to turn laboratory discoveries into treatments for patients, to engage
communities in clinical research efforts, and to train the next
generation of researchers. MUSC has been awarded the coveted Clinical Translational Science Award (CTSA)
from the National Center for Research Resources, a division of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH). NIH will grant a total of 60 CTSAs through 2012 to
round out this exclusive network.
Dr.
Kathleen Brady speaks with WCBD’s Raymond Owens during the July 14
press conference announcing a $20 million grant to MUSC and South
Carolina Clinical & Translational Research Institute.
“This award is the result of the collaborative efforts of clinicians,
researchers and educators across the state of South Carolina, all with
the shared vision of improving the health of the state’s citizens,”
said Kathleen Brady, M.D., Ph.D., South Carolina Clinical &
Translational Research Institute (SCTR) director and CTSA principal
investigator. “We are grateful to the National Institutes of Health for
giving MUSC and our collaborators the opportunity to join the top
research universities in the U.S. in the CTSA consortium.”
MUSC, and SCTR, will receive $20 million in
research funding during the next five years. These monies will fund 11
programs on campus and through partnerships with the University of
South Carolina, Health Sciences South Carolina, Clemson University,
South Carolina State University, Claflin University, Greenwood Genetics
Center, South Carolina Research Authority, and VA medical centers. The
award provides these programs with more infrastructure support, better
training for researchers, and perhaps best of all, greater access to
top clinical trials and promising new treatments for patients who need
them now.
“The CTSA is the vehicle that the NIH is using to shape the future of
clinical research, and clinical and translational work are among the
highest priorities at the Medical University. We see great
opportunities with this new award to build upon our established
successes,” said MUSC President Ray Greenberg, M.D., Ph.D. “Given the
great disparities in health within the population of South Carolina,
our focus, appropriately enough, will be on many of the conditions
which contribute to these disparities. Our partnerships with colleagues
across the state will amplify the impact of what we may have been able
to accomplish on our own.”
The CTSA not only enables MUSC to play a larger, national role in
improving the lives of patients across a spectrum of diseases, but also
provides economic opportunities for South Carolina.
Moving forward in an unprecedented economic climate and in addition to
jobs created directly from the CTSA, research and clinical success from
CTSA will beget more biotechnology transfer and spin-off companies and
contributions to the knowledge-based economy taking root in South
Carolina.
Perry Halushka, M.D., Ph.D., MUSC College of Graduate Studies dean and
CTSA co-principal investigator, played a large role for decades in
ground-breaking translational research long before it became a national
focus. “The predecessor to this grant, the General Clinical Research
Center, had a 35-year history of conducting outstanding clinical and
translational research,” he said. “With the CTSA grant and SCTR, I see
the university building on this tradition and accelerating the process
of translating basic science discoveries to improvements in the
treatment of patients.”
MUSC Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost John Raymond,
M.D., said, “I know this is going to be a complex, exciting,
challenging endeavor. I look forward to enlisting the broadest possible
participation in this transformative process, and we are committed to
optimizing this opportunity to ensure the brightest future for MUSC,
our statewide network of partners, and the people of South Carolina.”
“We are truly unique in that our CTSA award is the only partnership
focused on health issues specific to rural areas with a statewide
reach, ” saidRandal Davis, MUSC’s CTSA project director.
To learn more about the CTSA program at MUSC, visit http://www.musc.edu/sctr.
For general information about the CTSA program, visit http://www.ncrr.nih.gov/crctsa or http://www.CTSAweb.org. A description of each program and its lead investigator is available upon request.
Friday, July 17, 2009
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