|
NIAID
Seeks Applications from Institutions to Lead Clinical Trials Units
for Revamped HIV/AIDS Trials Networks
The
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) has
announced that it is soliciting applications from U.S. and overseas
research institutions seeking to become Clinical Trials Units (CTUs)
in the Institute's revamped HIV/AIDS Clinical
Trials Networks.
NIAID,
part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), supports the
world's largest portfolio of clinical research in HIV/AIDS prevention,
vaccine and treatment research and development.
This
solicitation, the second of two Requests for Applications (RFAs),
is designed to increase the efficiency, accountability and integration
of NIAID's HIV/AIDS clinical research networks and enhance their
capacity to effectively conduct vital clinical research, especially
in resource-limited settings.
The
first solicitation, "Leadership for HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials
Networks," was released in November 2004. The networks emerging
from that RFA will focus on developing and evaluating treatments,
prevention strategies and vaccines, with an emphasis on interventions
that can be employed in resource-limited settings. The Clinical
Trials Units funded in response to this RFA will carry out the research
agendas of those networks in one or more of the following six priority
areas of investigation:
Developing HIV
vaccines
Translating research insights into therapies to treat
HIV disease
Optimizing clinical management of HIV/AIDS, including co-infections
and other HIV-related
conditions
Developing microbicides
to prevent HIV acquisition and/or transmission
Preventing mother-to-child
transmission of HIV
Developing other methods of HIV prevention
"These
Clinical Trials Units will help coordinate and carry out the next
generation of AIDS research in the United States and globally,"
says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "Our goal is to
develop the best possible leadership and research infrastructure
to carry out a flexible, collaborative and coordinated approach
to HIV vaccine, prevention and treatment research."
Funding
for both the Network Leadership and the Clinical Trials Units is
expected to total up to $300 million for the first year and may
continue for up to seven years. The earliest anticipated award date
for the Leadership RFA is March 2006; Clinical Trials Units RFA
awards are estimated to be made in mid- to late 2006.
Each
Clinical Trials Unit will be led by a principal investigator and
will comprise an administrative component and one or more clinical
research sites. NIAID strongly encourages the establishment of CTUs
that reach populations most affected or threatened by the HIV/AIDS
epidemic in the United States and abroad, especially women, adolescents
and people of color.
"The
success of the restructured HIV/AIDS clinical networks will require
the commitment of diverse institutions, an unprecedented degree
of collaboration, and the involvement and support of communities
affected by HIV/AIDS in the United States and around the world,"
notes Dr. Fauci.
The
updated clinical research structure envisioned in the two RFAs emerged
through extensive consultations with researchers, clinicians, nurses,
community leaders, advocates and people living with and at risk
for HIV/AIDS.
Application Information
Any
public or private institution or organization, governmental or non-governmental,
for-profit or nonprofit, can submit an application in response to
the Clinical Trials Units RFA. These organizations, which can be
domestic or foreign, may include universities, colleges, hospitals,
private and group medical practices, units of state and local government,
eligible agencies of the U.S. federal government and non-governmental
agencies.
Four
pre-application meetings devoted to a comprehensive overview of
application submission requirements for the Clinical Trials Units
RFA will take place at venues in the United States and abroad. The
first day of each meeting will consist of a grant-writing workshop
designed to build an understanding of the NIH grant application
process and provide information on how to develop a grant application.
The second day will feature an overview of application requirements,
procedures and the review process. Meetings will be held in the
following cities:
Bethesda, MD (March 7-8, 2005)
Miami, FL (March 17-18, 2005)
Johannesburg, South Africa (March 31-April 1, 2005)
Bangkok, Thailand (April 20-21, 2005)
Copies of the
RFA for Clinical Trials Units for HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials Networks
and information on the locations, logistics and other details of
the pre-application meetings can be obtained at http://www.niaid.nih.gov/daids/rfa/network06.
02/16/05
Source
NIAID
News
Link to Index of All HIV and AIDS
Articles by Topic
|