Thursday, January 25, 2007
DCRI faculty members among the first to receive CTSA funds for biostatistical research
By Julie McKeel
DCRI faculty Huiman Barnhart, Annie Lin, and Wendy Pan, members of the Duke Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, were awarded grant funding for research projects in biostatistical methodology applicable to translational science. These grants awards are the first to be funded by the new Duke Translational Medicine Institute (DTMI), which was established by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) last year.
In October 2006, the NIH announced grant awards to 12 educational institutions, including Duke University Medical Center, to develop institutes to speed the translation of discoveries made in the laboratory into therapies that improve human health.
Stephen George, PhD |
The NIH program is designed to support the spectrum of research from the laboratory bench to implementation in public health practice. Ultimately, the hope is that the CTSAs will result in improved health outcomes for the American population.
Wasting no time in this initiative, Stephen George, Ph.D., chief of the biostatistics division in the Duke Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, announced internal grant funds available through the NIH's CTSA grant to Duke to support research projects in biostatistical methodology applicable to translational science. These awards were available to all full-time faculty members at Duke University.
The applications were to be relevant to either the “bench to bedside” or the “trials to population” translational block of research. The grant would provide sufficient protected time for recipients to develop research grant applications to external agencies. Each award would also cover partial salary and benefits for the recipient for one year.
Applications were reviewed by a panel of experts consisting of several senior members of the Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics as well as several external reviewers chosen for their expertise in biostatistics or translational medicine.
The awards were announced this week, and are effective for one year starting February 1, 2007 . The grants are eligible, in a competitive renewal process, for one additional year. A progress report is required on at the end of the first year and at the end of each subsequent year, if any.
The awardees and their projects are:
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Huiman Xie Barnhart, PhD
Associate Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Duke Clinical Research Institute
Assessing agreement with repeated and multivariate data |
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Cliburn Chan, MD, PhD
Assistant Research Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Center for Computational Immunology
Development of a platform for exploratory and statistical analysis of multi-color flow cytometry data |
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Sheng Feng, PhD
Assistant Research Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Center for Computational Immunology
Modeling higher order linkage disequilibrium patterns using the HapMap data |
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Sin-Ho Jung , PhD
Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center
An efficient multiple testing procedure and sample size calculation for microarrays |
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Min (Annie) Lin, PhD
Assistant Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Duke Clinical Research Institute
Translating pharmacogenetic data of drug response into clinical practice with a joint model for longitudinal and time-to-event outcomes
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Wenqin (Wendy) Pan, PhD
Assistant Research Professor
DUMC Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
Duke Clinical Research Institute
Statistical methods for analyzing medical cost data under dependent censoring
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Brenda Mickley, business development associate with the Duke Clinical Research Institute’s Strategic Business Development office, is in charge of the administrative and financial details of these grant awards.
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