The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has established the National Centre for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), the nation’s hub for catalysing innovations in translational science. The action was made possible by Congress’ approval of a fiscal year 2012 spending bill and the president’s signing of the bill, which includes the establishment of NCATS with a budget of $575 million.
NCATS will be working closely with partners in the regulatory, academic, non-profit, and private sectors, NCATS will strive to identify and overcome hurdles that slow the development of effective treatments and cures.
“Congressional support for the NCATS marks a major milestone in mobilizing the community effort required to revolutionize the science of translation,” said NIH director Dr Francis S Collins, MD, PhD. “Patients suffering from debilitating and life threatening diseases do not have the luxury to wait the 13 years it currently takes to translate new scientific discoveries into treatments that could save or improve the quality of their lives. The entire community must work together to forge a new paradigm, and NCATS aims to catalyse this effort.”
A prime example of the type of innovative projects that will be led by NCATS is the new initiative between NIH, the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to develop cutting-edge chip technology. This new technology will allow researchers to screen for safe and effective drugs far more swiftly and efficiently than current methods. A great deal of time and money can be saved testing drug safety and effectiveness much earlier in the process.
To meet the goals of NCATS, NIH is reorganizing a wide range of preclinical and clinical translational science capabilities within NIH into an integrated scientific enterprise with new leadership and a bold new agenda. While the effort to recruit an NCATS director continues, organizational changes and realignment of resources will move forward under the leadership of Acting Director Thomas R Insel, MD, and Acting Deputy Director Kathy Hudson, Ph.D. Dr Insel is the director of the National Institutes of Mental Health and Dr Hudson is the deputy director for science, outreach, and policy at the NIH.
The following programmes will comprise NCATS:
Bridging interventional development gaps, which makes available critical resources needed for the development of new therapeutic agents; clinical and translational science awards, which fund a national consortium of medical research institutions working together to improve the way clinical and translational research is conducted nationwide.
Cures Acceleration Network, which enables NCATS to fund research in new and innovative ways.
FDA-NIH Regulatory Science, which is an interagency partnership that aims to accelerate the development and use of better tools, standards and approaches for developing and evaluating diagnostic and therapeutic products.
Office of Rare Diseases Research, which coordinates and supports rare diseases research.
Components of the Molecular Libraries, which is an initiative that provides researchers with access to the large-scale screening capacity necessary to identify compounds that can be used as chemical probes to validate new therapeutic targets.
Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases, which is a programme to encourage and speed the development of new drugs for rare and neglected diseases.
The budget for NCATS is primarily a reallocation of funds from programmes previously located in the NIH Office of the director, National Human Genome Research Institute, and National Centre for Research Resources.
NIH is committed to both basic and applied research and has maintained a relatively stable ratio of funding across these two areas of focus. The funding ratio will not be disturbed by the establishment of this new centre.
The formation of NCATS has been a methodical process highlighted by the recommendation of the NIH Scientific Management Review Board in December 2010 to create a new centre dedicated to advancing translational science. This recommendation was followed by a year of intensive feedback and expert insight from all sectors of translational science through advisory meetings and extensive public consultation.
“I am deeply grateful for the expertise and insight provided by the many researchers, industry executives, patients, voluntary organizations, and NIH staff that helped NIH evaluate NCATS’ purpose and crystallize its vision,” said Dr Collins.
NIH, the nation's medical research agency, is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases.
Source:Pharmabiz
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