We are pleased to announce the establishment of a sponsored clinical project support team called the Cellular Therapy Operations Program (CTOP). The CTOP team is currently focused on investigator initiated clinical trials testing therapeutic agents
produced at the Gates Biomanufacturing Facility. They support the recently opened adult UCD19 CAR-T clinical trial and the soon to open pediatric trial testing the same cellular therapy.
The CTOP team will provide project management, protocol writing and pharmaco-vigilance support. The medical director of this group is Michael R. Verneris, MD.
Dr. Verneris currently serves as the director of Bone Marrow Transplant and Cellular Therapy for the Children’s Hospital Colorado, Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders (CCBD) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus. He received his medical degree
from the Dartmouth-Brown Program in Medicine and completed a pediatric internship and residency at Children's National Medical Center, followed by a pediatric hematology/oncology fellowship at Stanford University and a post-doctoral fellowship at
the Stanford University Division of Bone Marrow Transplant.
If you have questions regarding this initiative please email ResearchAdminComm@cuanschutz.edu
Sincerely,
Thomas Flaig, MD
Vice Chancellor of Research
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The Michael J. Fox Foundation is dedicated to finding a cure for Parkinson's disease through an aggressively funded research agenda and to ensuring the development of improved therapies for those living with Parkinson's today.
6 New Funding Opportunities for Parkinson’s Research
Deadline: October 22, 2020 for Preproposals
For additional September 2020 featured funding opportunities please click here
By expanding research collaborations between the University of Colorado Anschutz and Boulder campuses, the AB Nexus will generate knowledge that improves human well-being and spurs innovation and economic development.
What’s new at NICHD?
NICHD Program Project Grants for HIV Research (P01 Clinical Trial Optional)
Program Number: RFA-HD-21-023
Deadline Dates:
Interested in collaborative research? Do you have a collaborative research funding opportunity you would like to announce or are you searching for a collaborator on a specific proposal?
Collaborations between research groups are growing, and the collaborating groups can be across the hall, University of Colorado campuses, the country, or the globe. Scholars or groups in different fields work together on interdisciplinary projects.
The OVCR wants to offer this space on a bi-weekly basis for promotion of collaborative research funding opportunities (internal and external funding) and solicitations for prospective interdisciplinary collaborators for proposed funding applications.
Send inquires to ResearchAdminComm@cuanschutz.edu
The ADEAR Training Program is now accepting applications for post-doctoral training in HIV/AIDS-related research for the 2020-21 academic year. This integrative program provides multidisciplinary training in basic, translational
and clinical science in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV)/Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) research.
Postdoctoral scientist will receive training under the direction of a broadly based group of faculty at the University of Colorado campuses in Aurora, Boulder and Denver, Colorado State University and Denver University.
The training program faculty are experienced mentors and actively engaged in research related to the discovery and evaluation of new antiretroviral drugs or the application of existing antiretrovirals for the treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS.
Information about the participating institutions can be found by contacting Kelly.Rico@CUAnschutz.edu
Trainees receive salary and benefits support according to NIH guidelines, travel funds, and funds to pay for training-related coursework. Support is typically provided for two years, contingent on progress in the first year. One additional year of support can be requested at the end of year two. Award of a third year of support is contingent on approval of the Training Program Steering Committee.
All applicants must:
General instructions, criteria, and selection process:
Application Instructions:
Applications, which include the following documents, must be submitted electronically through the program website linked below by Tuesday, September 22, 2020. Please contact Kelly Rico, ADEAR Program Administrator
with any questions.
The awards will be announced in October 2020.
The NCI Predoctoral to Postdoctoral Fellow Transition Award (F99/K00 Clinical Trial Not Allowed): RFA-CA-20-048
The purpose of the NCI Predoctoral to Postdoctoral Fellow Transition Award (F99/K00) is to encourage and retain outstanding graduate students recognized by their institutions for their high potential and strong interest in pursuing careers as independent
cancer researchers. The award will facilitate the transition of talented graduate students into successful cancer research postdoctoral appointments, and provide opportunities for career development activities relevant to their long-term career goals
of becoming independent cancer researchers.
Interested candidates must send a one-page summary of their Research Training Plan and their NIH biosketch in pdf format to Ryan Holland by September 18, 2020.
Notice of Changes to Funding Opportunities from the NIH
Specific COVID Related Funding
RADx-rad will support new, or non-traditional applications of existing approaches, to enhance their usability, accessibility, and/or accuracy. RADx-rad will be centrally aligned and coordinated to harmonize the data collection, storage, and management, providing an opportunity to further explore and identify additional approaches to understand this novel virus. Beyond the current crisis, it is anticipated that the technologies advanced through RADx-rad may also be applicable to other, yet unknown, infectious agents.
The mini-symposium will be on November 2nd and 3rd (9-11 am), and focus on research at the interface of aging and cancer. Presentations will be from all four Cancer Center Programs (MCO, THI, CPC and DT) plus a few additional talks from regional aging centers. Topics will range from a very basic understanding for how aging impacts cells (from mutations to metabolism to pathways to telomeres), immune function, cancer progression, therapeutic responses, clinical outcomes, and patient decision-making and survivorship.
This bulletin is distributed on the 1st & 3rd Tuesday of the month for the CU Anschutz Research Community.
Past Research Bulletins can be found here.
Please click here if you wish to be added to this distribution.