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NHLB Advisory Council Minutes, 6/2009
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council Meeting Summary, June 10, 2009
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Home » About NHLBI » Advisory and Peer Review Groups » NHLBAC
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council
This is a brief summary of the June 10, 2009, meeting of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council (NHLBAC). It will be
replaced by the full minutes of the meeting when they become available.
Opening Remarks and Report of the Director
Budget Update
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
Update
Process to Facilitate Council Nominations for Center for
Scientific Review (CSR) Study Sections and NHLBI
Review Committees
MERIT Award Program
NHLBI Public Interest Organization (PIO) Meeting
NHLBI Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) Risk Factor Guidelines:
New Directions
Report of the Board of External Experts and Initiative
Concepts for Fiscal Years 2010 and Beyond
[To Top]
OPENING REMARKS AND REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR
Dr. Elizabeth Nabel, Director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), welcomed members to the 234th meeting of the National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Advisory Council (NHLBAC).
Dr. Nabel announced two Institute changes:
The Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and the Division of Prevention and Population Sciences will be merged into the Division of Cardiovascular Sciences to
align the Institute's administrative structure with the its cardiovascular programs which now effectively span basic, clinical, and population research. Dr.
Michael Lauer, currently Director of the Division of Prevention and Population Sciences, will serve as Director of the new Division, and Dr. Sonia Skarlatos,
currently Acting Director of the Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, will serve as Deputy Director.
The Institute is seeking a Director (application closing date June 23) for its new Office of Global Health. The Institute has initiated several global health
activities this year. In June, it awarded contracts to establish nine global health Centers of Excellence (a joint project with UnitedHealth Group’s Chronic
Disease Initiative). Each Center will be led by a research institution in a developing country paired with at least one partnering academic institution in a
developed country. This worldwide network of research and training centers will build institutional and community capacity to prevent and control chronic
diseases.
Dr. Nabel announced two changes in NHLBI leadership:
Dr. Gregory Morosco, who served as Director of the Division of Application of Research Discoveries, retired recently after more than 25 years with the
Institute. Dr. Morosco played an instrumental role in the Institute's educational and outreach programs for health professionals, patients, and the public. Dr.
Rob Fulwood is serving as Acting Director.
Mr. Donald Christoferson, NHLBI's Executive Officer, will retire in July after 37 years with the NIH. Mr. Christoferson was recently awarded the Presidential
Rank Award of Meritorious Executive. Mr. Timothy Wheeles will serve as Acting Executive Officer.
[To Top]
Budget Update
Dr. Nabel reviewed the Institute's FY 2010 President's Budget, which totals $3,050,356,000, a 1.1 percent increase over the FY 2009 Conference budget. No major
changes have been made in any of the budget categories since FY 2009. Total research project grants (noncompeting and competing) are $2,051,848,000, a 1.0
percent increase over FY 2009.
Currently, the Institute's payline is at the 15.0 percentile for traditional research project grants (R01s) and exploratory/developmental research grants (R21s); at
the 20.0 percentile for new R01 investigators; and at the 25.0 percentile for early stage investigators (if expedited administrative review resolves summary
statement comments). (See discussion below regarding payline expansion with ARRA funds.)
[To Top]
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) Update
The ARRA was signed into law by President Obama on February 17, 2009. It provides $10.4 billion to the NIH (available for 2
years—through September 2010) to support programs to stimulate the economy, create and preserve jobs, and advance
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council Meeting Summary, June 10, 2009
biomedical research. The NHLBI is grateful for the opportunity to join the NIH in helping to improve the Nation’s health and
economy.
Dr. Nabel summarized the NIH scientific research and funding approach to ARRA, and described NHLBI ARRA funding plans in more detail.
Using existing mechanisms as well as new programs, the NIH plans to spend ARRA monies as follows: $8.2 billion for extramural scientific research ($7.4 billion of
which will be transferred to the Institutes/Centers (ICs), using a percentage-based formula); $1.3 billion for extramural repair, improvements, and construction;
$0.5 billion for intramural repair, improvements, and construction; and $0.4 billion for comparative effectiveness research (CER).
The NHLBI will receive about 10 percent of the $7.4 billion provided to NIH ICs for scientific research. It plans to accelerate implementation of the NHLBI Strategic
Plan, fund programs that will demonstrate significant advances in 2 years, and create or preserve jobs (with emphasis on supporting new and early-stage
investigators). The Institute will participate in the following NIH-wide ARRA programs:
Payline Expansion—to increase the number of R01s and R21s awarded by expanding FY 2008 and FY 2009 paylines.
Administrative Supplements—to provide an increment in funding to support research that is within the original scope of an active research grant. The NHLBI
plans to award administrative supplements to support:
research employment opportunities on R01s and R21s for new full-time-equivalent employees who are pre-doctoral students, postdoctoral trainees or
fellows, or recent college or master's degree graduates. Priority will be given to applications submitted by principal investigators who were qualified to
receive their current awards as Early Stage Investigators or New Investigators.
summer research experiences for students and science educators.
diversity in health-related research.
re-entry into biomedical and behavioral research careers.
Challenge Grants—to support high-impact research in topic areas that address specific scientific and health research challenges in biomedical and behavioral
research that would benefit from significant 2-year jumpstart funds.
Grand Opportunity (GO) Grants—to support high-impact, large-scale research on well-defined, priority topics that would benefit from a significant amount of
2-year funds. Research supported by "GO" grants should provide a high short-term return and offer a high likelihood of enabling growth and investment in
biomedical research and development, public health, and health care delivery.
New Faculty Recruitment to Enhance Research Capacity program—to enable U.S. academic institutions to augment or expand their biomedical research
efforts by hiring newly-independent investigators and providing them with appropriate start-up packages and the resources needed to develop pilot research
projects.
Summer Jobs in Research for Students and Teachers program—to engage students and educators in scientific research; funded with NIH OD ARRA funds.
Small Business Programs:
Small Business Catalyst Awards for Accelerating Innovative Research—to accelerate innovation through high-risk, high-reward research with
commercial potential; to attract new small businesses to the Phase I Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program and encourage pursuit of
fresh research perspectives.
Biomedical Research, Development, and Growth to Spur the Acceleration of New Technologies Pilot Program—to address the funding gap between
promising research and development (R&D) and commercialization by fostering "later stage" research activities and partnerships among a variety of
R&D collaborators.
Comparative Effectiveness Research—to support CER programs. The Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research was authorized by
ARRA legislation to help coordinate research and guide investments in CER funded by ARRA.
To provide accountability and transparency, the NHLBI has tailored standard operating procedures to ensure that ARRA goals and requirements are met. In
addition, grantees will be required to provide detailed quarterly budget reports (to be made publicly available at Recovery.gov) listing all ARRA-supported projects
or activities with estimates of the number of jobs created or retained.
The NHLBI ARRA Web site provides additional information, guidelines for grantees, FAQs, and links to additional ARRA resources.
[To Top]
Council Nominations for Center for Scientific Review (CSR) Study Sections and NHLBI Review Committees
In response to a Council request in February 2009, the NHLBI developed the following proposed process to facilitate Council nominations of peer reviewers:
Nominations for NIH CSR study sections: Prior to each Council meeting, Council members will be able to complete reviewer nomination forms via
the Electronic Council Book. Forms will be downloaded and distributed to Institute staff. When CSR requests nominations, staff will forward
recommendations to the Director, NHLBI, for submission to CSR.
Nominations for the three NHLBI Chartered Review Committees (NHLBI Clinical Trials Review Committee; NHLBI Institutional Training
Mechanism Review Committee; Heart, Lung, and Blood Program Project Review Committee): Once a year, Council members will be able to
complete reviewer nomination forms via the Electronic Council Book. Forms will be downloaded and distributed to committee Executive Secretaries,
with subsequent decision by the Director, NHLBI. The NHLBI will apprise Council yearly as to which reviewers were selected.
Council concurred with the proposed process. Nomination forms will be available on the Electronic Council Book for the next Council meeting.
[To Top]
MERIT Award Program
The NHLBI Method To Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37) is intended to provide long-term research grant support to investigators whose research
competency and productivity are distinctly superior and thus are likely to continue to perform in an outstanding manner. Investigators may not apply for a MERIT
award; instead, they are selected by the NHLBI on the basis of their current grant applications and their present and past grant support. MERIT awards are made
for up to 5 years, with the possibility of a 5-year extension.
Council members expressed concern about the process for selecting individuals for MERIT awards. To ensure selection of the most productive researchers, Council
suggested initially screening a larger pool of candidates (by adjusting the percentile cut-off for eligibility) and providing for a Council review of all eligible
candidates. The decision was made to provide Council a list of all eligible MERIT award nominees for FY 2009 (investigators with current applications within the
10th percentile would be considered) for review during closed session of the September 2009 Council meeting.
Because the process is under revision, no new MERIT nominations have been made as yet for FY 2009. However, FY 2009 MERIT extensions will be awarded under
the existing review procedure.
[To Top]
NHLBI PUBLIC INTEREST ORGANIZATION (PIO) MEETING
Ms. Paula Polite, Council member and Manager of Quality Programs, Division of General Services, Memphis, Tennessee, reported on the 10th annual NHLBI PIO
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council Meeting Summary, June 10, 2009
meeting held June 8-9, 2009. She thanked the NHLBI and reported that participants continue to find the content of the meetings and opportunities for networking
and meeting with NHLBI staff to be very beneficial. Ms. Polite noted that participants find the "Meet the NHLBI Staff" portion of the meeting especially helpful.
Dr. Nabel emphasized the importance of this event to the Institute and thanked Dr. Carl Roth, Associate Director for Scientific Program Operation, and his staff for
organizing the meeting each year.
[To Top]
NHLBI CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE (CVD) RISK FACTOR GUIDELINES: NEW DIRECTIONS
Dr. Sidney C. Smith, Jr., Professor of Medicine, University of North Carolina, and Senior Advisor for Cardiovascular Research Translation and Application, NHLBI,
reported on progress in developing new NHLBI clinical guidelines for cardiovascular risk reduction. The activity addresses Challenge 3.3 of the Institute's Strategic
Plan:
"To promote the development and implementation of evidence-based guidelines in participation with individuals, professional and patient
communities, and health care systems and to communicate research advances effectively to the public."
Current NHLBI CVD clinical guidelines focus on one specific risk factor (i.e., individual guidelines for hypertension, high blood cholesterol, and overweight/obesity).
Based on stakeholder recommendations, the NHLBI decided to maintain and update its risk factor-specific guidelines, but also to develop new integrated CVD risk
reduction guidelines to address more closely the "real world" clinical scenarios faced by individuals and clinicians.
The new NHLBI model for developing clinical guidelines:
emphasizes user-identified needs (targeting stakeholders, especially primary care clinicians and patients/consumers in addition to cardiovascular specialists;
being user-friendly; and providing concise, focused messages).
considers implementation issues throughout the process.
incorporates innovative informatics approaches and tools in guidelines development, knowledge gap analysis, implementation, and dissemination.
fosters communities of practice, national and international, including the joint development and sharing of tools and resources.
Dr. Smith explained the guidelines development process, described the underlying IT infrastructure, and noted how the new Web-based approach is supporting
collaboration. He emphasized the need for additional scientific evidence upon which to base clinical guidelines. See recent article co-authored by Dr. Smith (JAMA.
2009; 301:831-841).
The adult integrated CVD risk reduction guidelines are expected to be completed in 2011; the pediatric integrated cardiovascular risk reduction guidelines in 2009;
and the individual risk factor guideline updates in 2010.
[To Top]
REPORT OF THE BOARD OF EXTERNAL EXPERTS
AND INITIATIVES FOR FISCAL YEARS 2010 AND BEYOND
NHLBI staff presented 12 new initiatives, 7 renewals, and 3 requests by other ICs for secondary support, all of which had been reviewed in May by the Board of
External Experts (BEE). Initiative development at the NHLBI is a two-cycle process. First, staff within each extramural Division develop ideas and potential
initiatives, which they present to the trans-NHLBI Idea Forum. Sufficiently developed initiatives are subsequently considered by the BEE, which ranks each and
provides accompanying advice. The BEE also considers ideas that are not developed to the level of an initiative, but does not rank them.
The Council was mostly supportive of the initiatives presented, but made a number of specific recommendations for consideration prior to their release. The
Director, NHLBI, will consider the recommendations of the BEE and the Council and other budgetary and programmatic issues in determining which of the proposed
initiatives, if any, to implement.
Initiatives related to Strategic Plan Goal I: To improve understanding of the molecular and physiological basis of health and
disease, and to use that understanding to develop improved approaches to disease diagnosis, treatment, and prevention
Initiative
Purpose
Advancing Glycosciences in Heart, Lung, and
Blood Research with Resource Services,
Training, and Career Development (U01),
RFA
To provide critical research resources and services to advance the emerging discipline of glycosciences;
and to build capacity through multidisciplinary training, creating a cadre of "scientifically-bilingual"
investigators fluent in glycan chemistry and biology.
Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of
Arterial Stiffening and Its Relationship to
Development of Hypertension (R01), RFA
To stimulate basic physiological, cellular, and molecular investigations to elucidate the underlying
mechanisms that lead to arterial stiffening; to determine the relationship between arterial stiffening and
the development of hypertension in animal models; and to identify new targets for therapeutic
intervention to prevent or reverse arterial stiffening.
Directed Stem Cell Differentiation for CellBased Therapies for Heart, Lung, and Blood
Diseases (R21, SBIR [R43/R44], STTR
[R41/R42]; renewal), PA
To support research on the factors and mechanisms that control the differentiation of embryonic or adult
stem or progenitor cells in vitro or in vivo.
Lung Tissue Research Consortium
(renewal), RFP
To facilitate studies of pulmonary diseases by continuing the Lung Tissue Research Consortium, an
NHLBI program for the standardized processing, storage, and distribution of lung tissues and associated
clinical data.
Nutrition and Diet in the Causation,
Prevention, and Management of Heart
Failure (R01 and R21; renewal), PA
To stimulate research on the role of nutrition and diet in the causation, prevention, and treatment of
cardiomyopathies and heart failure. The overall goal is to develop a satisfactory science base for
nutritional management of patients in various stages of heart failure and development of preventive
approaches for high-risk individuals.
Systems Biology Approach to the
To investigate the mechanisms of latency and the reactivation of tuberculosis in the host using
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council Meeting Summary, June 10, 2009
Mechanisms of Tuberculosis Latency and
Reactivation (R01), RFA
collaborative systems biology approaches based primarily on human studies.
Next Generation Association Studies (U01),
RFA
To support technology development and implementation with the goal of adding a functional dimension
to genome-wide association studies by combining cellular reprogramming strategies with molecular
profiling, followed by integrating the resultant information with existing genotypic data to determine how
naturally occurring human genetic variation influences the activities of biological networks in cell-based
models of disease.
Initiatives related to Strategic Plan Goal II: To improve understanding of the clinical mechanisms of disease and thereby
enable better prevention, diagnosis, and treatment
Initiative
Purpose
Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC)
Study (contract; renewal), RFP
To expand upon the resources of data, specimens, and infrastructure developed over 20 years of ARIC
by re-examining and continuing follow-up of the aging ARIC cohort; continuing community surveillance
to support research on long-term trends in coronary heart disease and heart failure; enhancing both the
cohort and community components with cardiovascular outcomes research to assess quality and
outcomes of medical care for heart failure and heart failure risk factors; and providing a population
laboratory platform for ancillary studies, training for new investigators, and data sharing.
Cross Organ Mechanism-Associated
Phenotypes for Genetic Analyses of Heart,
Lung, Blood, and Sleep Diseases (U01), RFA
To define an accumulating set of mechanism-associated traits that cross organ systems based upon
evolving knowledge of biological and molecular networks to improve phenotyping of individuals for
genetic research studies.
Functional Modeling of the Upper Airway
(R01), RFA
To identify control points of airflow limitation over the course of normal and abnormal development of
the upper airways.
In Vivo Detection of Atrial Fibrosis (R01),
RFA
To develop non-invasive methods to detect, localize, and assess atrial fibrosis in vivo to facilitate
advances in the prevention and treatment of atrial fibrillation.
Lung Transplantation: Planning Grants for
Clinical Trials of Novel Therapies (R34), RFA
To foster development of cutting-edge clinical trials, establish information about available patient
populations, and support investigator commitment to testing new efficacious interventions for reducing
complications after allograft lung transplantation in patients with chronic respiratory disease.
National Registry of Genetically Triggered
Thoracic Aortic Aneurysms and Other
Cardiovascular Conditions (GenTAC)
(renewal), RFP
To optimize the value and effectiveness of the NHLBI-supported GenTAC Registry. The renewal will
enrich datasets by collecting longitudinal follow-up data; improve data quality by the addition of an
Imaging Core; promote access and use of the Registry; and continue limited, new enrollment to enrich
the cohort with subgroups of high scientific interest.
New Strategies for Growing 3D Tissues
(R01/R21), RFA
To improve understanding of how cells respond to their environment and to develop accurate assays and
methods that may instruct the creation of 3D engineered cellular aggregates. Multidisciplinary
investigations are needed to demonstrate reproducible recapitulation in the laboratory for events such as
differentiation, proliferation, and senescence for tissue repair and regeneration relevant to heart, lung,
and blood diseases.
Summer Institute Program to Increase
Diversity in Health-related Research (R25,
renewal), RFA
To renew a highly successful Summer Institute Program to increase diversity in the study of heart, lung,
blood, and sleep disorders; to improve the recruitment and retention of junior faculty from disabled and
underrepresented minority groups.
Women's Health Initiative (WHI)(renewal),
RFP
To use the large WHI cohort to launch the next generation of important cardiovascular research projects
that target older women; to study heart failure, atrial fibrillation, venous thrombo-embolism, coronary
heart disease, and stroke in African American, Hispanic, and white women.
Initiatives related to Strategic Plan Goal III: To generate an improved understanding of the processes involved in translating
research into practice and use that understanding to enable improvements in public health and to stimulate further scientific
discovery
Initiative
Purpose
Innovators in Hemoglobinopathies Care
Career Development Award (K07), RFA
To build additional research investigator capacity by developing a new core group of clinical investigators
for multicenter studies in hemoglobinopathies that can address important questions about patient
management and translation of research results into practice through the use of multidisciplinary teams.
Reducing CVD Risk through Treatment of
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (U34), RFA
To support two randomized controlled trials and a protocol review committee via the Clinical Trial
Planning Grant Program Cooperative Agreement mechanism (U34) in order to acquire preliminary,
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council Meeting Summary, June 10, 2009
critical information necessary for designing a Phase III clinical trial to test whether positive airway
pressure treatment of obstructive sleep apnea reduces cardiovascular events.
To determine how to translate efficacious smoking cessation interventions into effective programs for
implementation in routine clinical care, and to assess their cost effectiveness.
Effectiveness Research on Smoking
Cessation in Hospitalized Patients (R01,
R18), RFA
Requests for Secondary Support
Initiative
Purpose
VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL (VITAL)
[NCI]
To determine whether daily supplements of vitamin D or marine omega-3 fatty acids (eicosapentaenoic
acid [EPA] + docosahexaenoic acid [DHA]) supplements will prevent the development of cardiovascular
disease in middle-age and elderly adults without clinical CVD. (The full trial will also test whether the
interventions reduce the risk of cancer.)
Health Behaviors in School-Age Children – A
Longitudinal Study [NICHD]
To collect longitudinal data on individuals in a nationally representative sample supported by the NICHD,
in order to characterize the developmental changes in CVD-related risk factors and behaviors in older
adolescents (15-18 years) as they become young adults; improve understanding of the etiology,
determinants, and influences on adolescents' diets, physical activity, obesity, and CVD risk; and provide
information to guide preventive programs.
The Testosterone Trial – Cardiovascular and
Metabolic Risk Trial [NIA]
To test whether testosterone treatment for one year in elderly men with low serum testosterone
concentration (100 -250 ng/dL) and signs and symptoms that could be due to low testosterone
improves their cardiovascular risk profile more than placebo and results in a smaller increase in coronary
artery plaque volume (as evaluated by coronary computed tomography angiography).
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File Type | application/pdf |
Author | Shari Eason Ludlam |
File Modified | 2009-12-17 |
File Created | 2009-12-17 |