# The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center

> **NIH NIH UL1** · HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL · 2020 · $203,391

## Abstract

Contact PD/PI: Nadler, Lee Marshall
OVERALL: ABSTRACT
By convening, connecting, and catalyzing the formation of multi-institutional, cross-disciplinary teams from
across Harvard's (HU) 10 schools and 16 independent academic health centers (AHCs), Harvard Catalyst
(HC) has fostered a “One Harvard” community and culture that has transformed the quality, efficiency, and
impact of clinical and translation (CT) research at HU. HC's commitment to make the whole of the HU CT
research enterprise greater than the sum of its parts has led to the development and continuous evolution of
12 innovative and integrated Cores focused on training the 21st century CT workforce, addressing the needs of
patients and their communities, and incentivizing and prioritizing collaboration, team science, and stakeholder
engagement. HC Cores have developed workflows, processes, methodologies, tools, and technologies to
support the training and needs of T0-T4 CT investigators, their teams, community stakeholders, and the HU
ecosystem, and have collected qualitative and quantitative data to demonstrate their value at HU hub. Once
demonstrated, HC shares its learning as open source with other CTSAs and the CTSA consortium. To date,
Profiles, i2b2 SHRINE (now Accrual to Clinical Trials ACT Network), Master Reliance Agreements and online
reliance systems (now SMART IRB), eagle-i, Scheduler, online educational resources (initiating the N-lighten
Network), and open innovation experiments have been disseminated to the CTSA consortium.
Going forward to fully align with NCATS' strategic goals, HC will implement five specific aims: Workforce
Development (Aim 1) will support the broadly defined educational needs of the present and future CT
workforce inclusive of all CT research domains, disciplines, medical and graduate students, post-graduate
trainees, investigators, multi-disciplinary team members, and communities of collaborators. Research Methods
and Processes (Aim 2) will provide “everything necessary” to execute CT research including methods,
processes, workflows, pilot grants, novel technologies, and integrated data sets necessary for investigators
and their teams to succeed locally and in collaboration with communities and the CTSA consortium. Integration
(Aim 3) will ensure that translational science is interconnected across all T domains and is inclusive of the
needs of special populations and individuals across their entire lifespan. Collaboration and Engagement (Aim
4) will promote team science by extending the CT research community beyond its traditional academic
borders. It engages and partners with our patients, communities, and our diverse ecosystem to participate in
prioritization decisions and gap analysis. Informatics (Aim 5) will respond to the needs of CT investigators,
teams, patients, and communities by providing enabling processes, methodologies, and tools. HC Learning CT
Research System will enable HC to study the science of CT science and develop evidence-base...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10144555
- **Project number:** 3UL1TR002541-03S1
- **Recipient organization:** HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL
- **Principal Investigator:** Lee Marshall Nadler
- **Activity code:** UL1 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $203,391
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 2018-05-01 → 2023-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10144555

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10144555, The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center (3UL1TR002541-03S1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10144555. Licensed CC0.

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