| Literature DB >> 34192060 |
Dushyantha Jayaweera1, Patrick A Flume2, Nora G Singer3, Myron S Cohen4, Anne M Lachiewicz4, Amanda Cameron2, Naresh Kumar1, Joel Thompson5, Alyssa Cabrera6, Denise Daudelin6, Reza Shaker7, Philippe R Bauer8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 altered research in Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) hubs in an unprecedented manner, leading to adjustments for COVID-19 research.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; CTSA; Clinical translational research; leadership; lessons learned
Year: 2021 PMID: 34192060 PMCID: PMC8185424 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2021.784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Role of the selected variables in establishing a COVID-19-related research area and a diagnostic laboratory. Odds ratios (95% confidence interval in parenthesis)
| Variables | Creation of dedicated COVID-19 research area | Creation of COVID-19 diagnostic laboratory |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical and Translational Science Awards involvement in decision-making (1 = YES, 0 otherwise) | 3.28 | 16.75*** |
| (0.52–20.59) | (2.17–129.39) | |
| Funds provided by the institution (1 = YES, 0 otherwise) | 3.88** | 2.15 |
| (1.12–13.40) | (0.21–21.67) | |
| Funds provided by the federal agencies (1 = YES, 0 otherwise) | 1.37 | 4.74 |
| (0.33–5.66) | (0.56–40.51) | |
| Time of COVID-19-related disruption (1 = Jan–March, 0 otherwise) | 8.10** | 1.19 |
| (1.37–47.98) | (0.08–18.20) | |
| Constant | 0.03*** | 0.22 |
| (0.00–0.34) | (0.01–6.28) | |
| Observations | 59 | 59 |
*** P ** , ** pnsP ** pns*
Survey responses from 60 Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSAs) with focus on how CTSA was involved in the decision-making process (survey free text)
| Responses | Total, |
|---|---|
| Policy/guideline decision-making for research | 17 |
| Policy/guideline decision-making for institution/hospital and research | 16 |
| Prioritization of COVID-19-related research (approval of which studies to prioritize and engagement in rapid startup/execution of COVID-19 studies) | 11 |
| Decision-making process regarding which human subjects research projects could continue and which could not | 5 |
| Facilitated information sharing and removing barriers | 4 |
| Policy/guideline decision-making for hospital/university/institutional | 3 |
| Helped find funding | 1 |
| Engaged in collaborating with other institutions and local government | 1 |
| Deployed CTSA resources to assist with pandemic (i.e., Testing) | 1 |
Total Responses* (some are counted more than once if response was multifaceted) = 48.
Survey responses from 60 CTSAs with a focus on the source of emergency funding the institution received for COVID-19 research
| Source | Number of responses |
|---|---|
| Benefactors/donors | 16 |
| Institutional | 14 |
| Pharmaceutical/industry | 12 |
| State | 11 |
| Award supplements (i.e., NCATS) | 9 |
| NIH | 9 |
| Federal | 7 |
| Foundation grants | 7 |
| CARES act | 6 |
| Local CTSA | 5 |
| BARDA | 2 |
| DOD | 2 |
| HRSA | 2 |
COVID-19, The coronavirus disease 2019 AKA severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) disease; BARDA, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority; CTSA, Clinical and Translational Science Award; NCATS, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences; CARES act, Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act; NIH, National Institute of Health; DOD, Department of Defense; HRSA, Health Resources and Services Administration.
Fig. 1.COVID-19 treatment review panel workflow (Mayo Clinic’s experience), In order to prioritize studies while maintaining equipoise among them, the establishment of ad hoc committee to review each new case in a multidisciplinary model that interacts with the care teams is a way to facilitate research as well as the best supportive care, adapted with time. ER, emergency room; ICU, intensive care unit.
Lessons learned regarding prioritizing pandemic research using mixed methods
| 1. | Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSAs) played a major role in the current pandemic and should be empowered to do so in future pandemics with sufficient funding. |
| 2. | Funding from benefactors/donors, institution, industry, National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences and state were important sources for COVID-19 research. However, Clinical and Translational Science Institute funding made the greatest impact on infrastructure. |
| 3. | Developing laboratory services, new diagnostics, biosafety level 2 to 3 laboratories, and biorepositories is essential in the preparedness of a pandemic. |
| 4. | Most institutions can shut down their regular activity and engage their workforce in pandemic research instead. |
| 5. | Flexible staff hiring and overtime are needed to facilitate enrollment into studies. Early engagement of human resources is essential. |
| 6. | Formation of feasibility committees to process high study proposal volume and facilitate the assessment of the feasibility and scientific merit of potential studies. |