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Sharing in GRF Application. Yiu-fai Cheung, MD Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine LKS Faculty of Medicine The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong, China. ‘ Pre-Incubation’. Is this an appropriate time to apply? experience, credentials track record
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Sharing in GRF Application Yiu-fai Cheung, MD Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine LKS Faculty of Medicine The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong, China
‘Pre-Incubation’ Is this an appropriate time to apply? • experience, credentials • track record Should I publish more on ‘focused’ clinical topics first? Discussion with mentor(s)
‘Pre-Incubation’ What reviewers are looking for • scientific merit • potential impact • novelty • solid hypothesis and logical objectives • appropriateness and feasibility of proposed methodology • credentials of investigators (PI and CoIs) • existing facilities
Incubation Why am I selecting this clinical problem? • experience and competence • aware of the field’s research directions (‘Blue Ocean’ strategy) and knowledge gaps • competitive edge
Incubation Is this an ‘important’ clinical problem to study? What is the clinical impact? • paradigm shift in the understanding of clinical phenomenon and disease mechanism with long-term implications • changes in clinical practice (diagnosis, management) and outcomes • changes in health care policies • ‘correlative or descriptive’ versus ‘mechanistic’
Incubation Be careful if the proposal is based solely on the following premises • this clinical problem has not been studied previously (so-what and why not?) • limited data are available (how does your proposal add to the existing literature?) • existing data are extremely controversial (how does your study help to resolve the controversy?) • recent availability of new technologies (method in search of problem versus hypothesis-driven) • personal interest
Effect of iron overloading on arterial distensibility and endothelial function in patients with beta-thalassaemia major
Hypothesis and Objectives Hypothesis-driven clinical studies • define hypothesis before designing the study • Hypothesis (one simple sentence): testable, focused, clearly conceptualized and articulated • Primary and secondary objectives: actionable terms (to determine, compare, correlate …..) • internal peer review
Hypothesis and Objectives Beware of • an unfocused hypothesis and hence unclear objectives • just a fishing expedition • being overly ambitious
Hypothesis and Objectives With testable hypotheses with achievable objectives, what then is the long-term impact? • possible outcome in terms of local relevance and clinical significance and implications
Background Work done by others • a concise updated literature review (what is known) • identify gaps in knowledge (what is unknown) • discuss existing controversies (what is uncertain) • justify the need for this study and describe how the study is innovative • establish links between the background and the proposed hypothesis and objectives • brief recapitulation of the clinical significance (do not overstate the significance)
Background Work done by your group • show the expertise (line up collaborators) • demonstrate your track record (PI and CoIs) • summary of promising preliminary data support your hypothesis show the link to the proposed study demonstrate feasibility help to build the confidence of reviewers
Research Plan and Methodology Study design • case-control study, randomized control trial, epidemiologic survey, other designs • how to recruit representative subjects from the target population • randomization and blinding procedures • use of flow charts / diagrams may be helpful
Research Plan and Methodology Subjects • reassure the reviewer of availability of participants (provide supportive data) • inclusion/exclusion criteria (justify the criteria and address potential biases) • controls (what is meant by ‘normal’ controls?)
Research Plan and Methodology Intervention and outcome measures • comprehensive description of intervention strategy and its implementation • potential risks, protective measures, benefits • outcomes definition of primary and secondary outcome measures validity and reliability
Research Plan and Methodology Instruments and data collection and procedures • description of the instruments (validity, reliability) • data to be collected (ensure their inclusion in statistical analysis)
Research Plan and Methodology Sample size calculation and statistical analysis • discuss with biostatistician • power calculation for primary outcome measure • estimate realistic attrition rate • framework of statistical analysis • address missing data
Research Plan and Methodology Other aspects • timetable • awareness of and ways to address potential limitations • contingency plans in case of roadblocks
Abstract • the last to complete • the first to be read by reviewers • how to engage and sustain their interest • simple and concise nature of clinical problem need for this research innovation hypothesis, objectives, methodology clinical significance
Finally Putting yourself in the shoes of the reviewers • conciseness, clarity • layout and formatting • avoiding jargons and too many abbreviations • self-contained proposal • need to be taught at times • ‘abstract’ and ‘hypothesis and objectives’