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Archive: UCSF Leaders Reflect on Significance of Clinical and Translational Science Institute
Campus leaders and faculty are excited about the potential for the newly created UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) to accelerate the pace at which basic science discoveries can improve human health.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has awarded UCSF more than $100 million over a period of five years to establish the CTSI, which will integrate and expand existing multidisciplinary clinical research centers, enhance training programs, provide incentives for collaborations between laboratory-based scientists and clinical researchers, and create a virtual home to foster better communication among them.
"UCSF is already unique in enjoying world-class excellence across disciplines, departments and schools in an exceptionally collaborative environment," says Eugene Washington, MD, executive vice chancellor and provost. "The CTSI will allow us to leverage our formidable strengths in even more innovative ways to translate research findings for public benefit."
Importantly, the UCSF CTSI also will create a new model of clinical research that engages community members, community practitioners and health care organizations in an active partnership with clinical researchers, with a particular emphasis on addressing health disparities.
"As a nation, we have made a huge investment in biomedical research over the past several decades," says David Kessler, MD, dean of the UCSF School of Medicine and vice chancellor for medical affairs. "Now, it is time to reap the rewards of that investment. This grant helps us bridge the gaps so that scientific discoveries in labs become practical medical advances for patients."
Joseph "Mike" McCune, MD, PhD, principal investigator for the successful NIH grant application, says that despite explosive gains in the understanding of basic science mechanisms of human disease, the meaningful translation of that knowledge to find new and better ways to detect, control, treat and prevent disease in patients has not moved fast enough.
"Basic research discoveries can form the foundation for better treatments and prevention of disease, and could potentially have great impact on health care in our society," says McCune, professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Experimental Medicine at UCSF. "To realize this potential, we have to move the research from the lab bench to the patient. This is first done in the controlled situation of our academic medical centers. If findings in patients look good there, the research can then be moved into the community to see if it is also applicable in the real world. This is the process of clinical and translational science, and this is what the CTSI will facilitate."
Simply put, McCune says, the "mission of the CTSI is to bring better therapies to more people, more quickly."
Specifically, the four goals of the CTSI are to:
- Integrate existing training programs to increase the number and quality of programs, and provide trainees from diverse disciplines with the knowledge, skills and motivation to make significant contributions to clinical and translational research;
- Improve infrastructure to foster the design and conduct of a diverse spectrum of clinical investigation and translational research;
- Enhance career development of people involved in clinical investigation and translational research, and change the academic culture to appropriately reward original, multidisciplinary, collaborative work; and
- Create a virtual home for clinical and translational researchers by fostering communication and encouraging collaboration, in part by sharing information using web-based programs and hosting public seminars.