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2. Special Introductions (1). NIH RepresentativesBarbara AlvingDirector, NCRRAnthony HaywardDirector, CTSA ProgramMary PuruckerNCRRSteven HirschfeldNICHDAlan Guttmacher NICHD . 3. Special Introductions (2). Arkansas Center for Clinical and Translational Research (CCTR)Richard Jacobs NYU-HHC Clinical and Translational Science InstituteWilliam BorkowskySouth Carolina Clinical and Translational Research InstituteCarol Wagner UTMB Institute for Translational SciencesTasnee C29971
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1. 1 Welcome to the CTSA Consortium Child Health Oversight Committee (CC-CHOC) Annual Meeting Bonnie Ramsey, Chair 2009-2010
April 30, 2010
2. 2 Special Introductions (1) NIH Representatives
Barbara Alving Director, NCRR
Anthony Hayward Director, CTSA Program
Mary Purucker NCRR
Steven Hirschfeld NICHD
Alan Guttmacher NICHD
3. 3 Special Introductions (2) Arkansas Center for Clinical and Translational Research (CCTR)
Richard Jacobs
NYU-HHC Clinical and Translational Science Institute
William Borkowsky
South Carolina Clinical and Translational Research Institute
Carol Wagner
UTMB Institute for Translational Sciences
Tasnee Chonmaitree
University of Cincinnati Center for Clinical and Translational Science and Training
Carole Lannon
University of Florida Clinical and Translational Institute
Desmond Schatz
University of Illinois-Chicago Center for Clinical and Translational Science
Mark Stein
4. 4 Special Introductions (3) CC-CHOC 2009 Fellowship Recipients
Sylvia Yoo Stanford
Justin Juskewitch Mayo Clinic
Congratulations!!!
5. 5 Election Results Chair-Elect 2010-2011
William Smoyer, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH
New Operations Group Representatives
Jon Davis, Tufts Clinical and Translational Science Institute
Frederick Kaskel, Albert Einstein-Montefiore Institute for Clinical and Translational Research
Alex Kemper, Duke Translational Medicine Institute
6. 6 Thank You!!! Departing Operations Group Members
Nancy Green Columbia
Carole Marcus Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Bert Lubin Oakland Children’s Hospital
7. 7 CC-CHOC 2009-2010
Year in Review
8. 8 Mission Statement Provide a unique national forum to identify collaborative opportunities to facilitate child health clinical and translational research
Building partnerships
Building infrastructure
Developing standard approaches
Identifying and overcoming barriers
Set priorities and enhance child health research across CTSA Consortium
Metrics of Success
9. 9 CC-CHOC Organizational Structure
10. 10 Building Partnerships Accomplishments (1) Pediatric Academic Societies Alliance
2008 - Alliance established
2009 - CC-CHOC representative on PAS Planning Committee
2010 - Clinical Translational Track established
Three symposia
CTSAs: Regulatory Challenges in Pediatric Research
May 1, 8:00 am – 10:00 am
Translating Research into Pediatric Clinical Practice
May 1, 10:15 am – 12:15 pm
CTSA’s: Changing the Environment for Pediatric Translational Research
May 1, 2:45 pm – 4:45 pm
Abstract session
CTSA Supported Pediatric Clinical Translational Research
May 2, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Enhanced by NCRR R-13 Award 2010-2012 (S. Barkin, PI)
Workshop on Informatics
CC-CHOC Fellows
11. 11 Building Partnerships Accomplishments (2) Society for Clinical and Translational Science 1st Annual Meeting, April 2010
Child Health Symposium - Life Span Research (Shari Barkin, Bill Hay, Deb Freidman)
CTSA Consortium Steering Committee (CCSC)
PI liaisons (Lisa Guay-Woodford, Ron Sokol, Jim Heubi)
Participation on SGC’s
Participation at annual meeting – October 2009
Presentation on monthly CCSC phone calls
NIHCD
Multi-site IRB review
BPCA Administrative supplements
Integrating CC-CHOC Working Groups with KFC’s
PREW – Research Ethics
Rare Diseases
CTSA Consortium Management Group (CMG)
Tesheia Johnson appointed as CC-CHOC liaison with CMG and Administrative KFC
1-2 volunteers from Administrative KFC will assist CC-CHOC in establishing milestones and tracking projects
12. 12 CC-CHOC Matched to KFCs
13. 13 Building Infrastructure Accomplishments Distributed Biobanks for Rare Disease Research (2008 Admin Supplement)
https://ctsawiki.org/wiki/display/Peds/Rare+Diseases+Workgroup
Curriculum Working Group developed core competencies for child health research
T2 WG creating inventory of existing PCRN’s
NICHD conducted workshops (Feb 2009) to develop collaboration infrastructure for product development
PREW established ethics consultative service
14. 14 Developing Standard ApproachesAccomplishments In partnership with NIHCD, CC-CHOC coordinated application process for administrative supplements to improve pediatric outcome measures
48 applications (all were multi-site)
18 awarded from 17 CTSA sites – total $8.5 million
When collaborating sites are included, 33/46 CTSA sites are participating in or benefiting from these awards
Linked to Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) of 2002
15. 15 BPCA Awards – A National Partnership with NICHD When fully implemented by 2011, the initiative is expected to provide a total of about $500 million annually to 60 research institutions. When fully implemented by 2011, the initiative is expected to provide a total of about $500 million annually to 60 research institutions.
16. 16 NICHD BPCA Funded CTSA Multi-Site Projects* Topic Areas: 8-neonatology, 5-neurology, 4-hypertension/hypotension, 3-“other”; >1 topic area possible
17. 17 BPCA AwardeesPlans for 2010 Completion of projects
Submit abstracts to PAS – Fall 2010
Participate in 2011 PAS Symposia and Workshops
18. 18 Identifying and Overcoming BarriersAccomplishments Multi-center IRB review – collaboration of PREW and NICHD
Sponsored workshops 2007-2009 to identify IRB inconsistencies
Developed proposal for a federated IRB model
Presented to SACHRP, July 2009
Presented to OHRP, 2010 and accepted
Template memoranda of understanding (MUO’s) developed and distributed to NCS sites, BPCA admin supplement PI’s
Multi-center Scientific Review Committee
Proposed by Drugs and Devices WG (Carole Marcus)
Plan to use MUO’s similar to IRB proposal
Completed survey to understand current CTSA “landscape” regarding use of SRC’s
19. 19 Set Priorities and Enhance Child Health Conducted first Metrics of Success survey to establish benchmarks for child health across CTSA’s
Encouraged child health representation on CTSA External Advisory Boards
Reviewed by CCSC?
Can we assure child health representation on study sections for CTSA grants?
20. 20 Challenges (1) Communications
Do the quarterly webinars help you?
How can we better communicate?
Engagement of CC-CHOC membership
How to get involved
Working Groups
Key Function Committees
Operations Group
Send ideas to Chair/Chair-Elect
Promote child health research at your site
Collaborations with Pediatric Clinical/Research Networks (PCRN) – comments from 2009 PCRN R-13 Conference regarding CTSA’s
“No national mandate for pediatric research exists”
“Support for new networks is limited”
“PCRN experience with collaboration could help CTSA’s which have limited experience with collaboration”
“CTSA’s should not form their own PRCN’s”
21. 21 Challenges (2) Linkages across CTSA Key Function Committees
Pediatric membership on KFC’s is increasing
Conduit for communication not established
Cost-sharing models
How many sites are charging investigators?
Impact of cost-sharing on CF research
What works? What doesn’t?
Supporting young investigators in CF research
Can they afford CRC usage?
Publication citation for child health research
Most studies are multi-center network trials
Journals frequently limit citations
Networks limit citations
CTSA’s are frequently not cited in PubMed
23. 23 Future Annual MeetingsPAS Alliance Advantages
Annual venue for meetings (free meeting rooms)
International visibility to child health research community
Platform to present CTSA accomplishments
Enhance collaborations and partnerships with other groups (e.g., PCRN’s)
Linkage to young investigators in child health research
PAS administrative staff are extremely helpful
Challenges
Different venue each year outside Washington DC
Some child health specialties do not participate in PAS
Limited access to allied health specialties (e.g., nursing, social work, nutrition)
Competing with more established research groups for audience (e.g., neonatology, nephrology, etc)
Potentially competes with newly established Society for Clinical and Translational Science annual meeting
24. 24 Annual Planning ProcessPAS – CC-CHOC Meeting PAS (Chair, CC-CHOC serves as PAS liaison)
May: Draft symposia proposals
June: Submit symposia proposals
July: PAS Planning Committee (Chicago) to choose symposia and form review committee for abstracts
September: Request for abstracts released (due November)
Sept/Oct: Encourage CTSA members to submit abstracts
Sept/Oct: Ask symposia speakers
December: Abstract review and ranking
January: PAS Planning Committee (Texas) to finalize program
February: Finalize program and “track” for CTSA
CC-CHOC (Operations Group)
Fall: Develop workshop concept and speakers
January: Develop business meeting agenda
(New 2010): Review process for fellows
25. 25 Moving Forward Establish a planning committee
Committee Chair – OG member?
Develops symposia proposals
Manage and review abstracts
Develops R-13 supported workshop
Consider establishing a PAS liaison position
Sits on OG
Serves as member of PAS Planning Committee
Serves on CC-CHOC Planning Committee
2-3 year term
Comments and questions about face to face meeting
Should it stay with PAS?
Is it the right length?
Longer business meeting?
26. 26 Goals for 2010-2011
27. 27 Two Year Goals Multi-center IRB model implemented and tested on several trials
Institution specific metrics of success benchmarks established
Established prioritization models for pediatric drugs and devices
Establishment of a virtual biorepository for utilization by rare disease groups
Contribute child health core competencies to the SGC standard curriculum
28. 28 Seven Year Goals National infrastructure including data management tools, support services and policies for networks to conduct multi-center trials
More emphasis on life span research with collaborations across all ages (child to adult health) to focus on prevention of adult disorders and better defining antecedents of adult disease (e.g. obesity)
Additional metrics of success that include the impact of research on improved child health
Increased number of young faculty developing careers in pediatric clinical and translational sciences
Strong emphasis in child health across all CTSA’s
29. 29 20 Year Goals Robust child health research community with senior faculty in leadership positions and junior faculty eager to develop their careers in clinical translational science
Personalized medicine with focus on prevention of childhood disorders and childhood antecedents of adult disease (e.g., obesity, hypertension, cancers). Research studies spanning the entire lifespan from children to adults (already done in CF)
Established minimally invasive, cheap and valid outcome measures that are age-specific, thereby increasing the speed and efficiency of pediatric drug/device development
More precise understanding of what is a “normal” child both in terms of genotype and phenotype
Better health for children worldwide as a result of successful research discoveries moved into action
30. 30 Thoughts from the Departing Chair (1) Improve communication and engagement across CC-CHOC
Every CC-CHOC member should be participating on either a working group, OG or KFC
Establish a better communication linkage across committees
A concise quarterly report summarizing activities of all WG’s and KFC’s
Develop 2-3 goals or targets to benchmark from Metrics of Success Year 1 results
Encourage CC-CHOC endorsement of NICHD MUO’s for multi-site IRB review process for multi-site child health studies using CTSA resources
Consider same process for SRC reviews
Develop clear “deliverables” to encourage clinical trial networks to collaborate with CTSA’s
Educational opportunities
Informatics and biostatistics
Pilot funding
Collection and access to biologic specimens
Clinical Research Associate pool
Centralized and efficient IRB and SRC reviews
31. 31 Thoughts from the Departing Chair (2) Publications – we need them!!!
Consider establishing a Publication WG
Publish Best Practices
Resolve citation issue with PCRN’s
How do we remain financially sustainable?
Share revenue models
Work with Children’s Hospitals (NACRI)
Develop other funding sources (e.g., Admin Supplements)