Johns Hopkins Rheumatic Diseases Resource-based Core Center

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P30 · $767,757 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Overall PROJECT SUMMARY One of the abiding philosophies of the Johns Hopkins Division of Rheumatology is that the critical pathway to understanding human autoimmune rheumatic diseases is through the study of large numbers of well-defined patients, followed over time, with the collection of rich phenotypic data, mapping disease trajectory, and where possible, acquiring and storing relevant biological materials from blood and target tissue. This repository of data and samples can then be used to separate heterogeneous diagnostic groups into more homogeneous subgroups, using tools that span the entire spectrum of investigation. This P30 will focus on providing the framework for organizational (oversight, management), operational (recruitment, sampling, processing), measurement and analytical (statistical, computational, and integrative) expertise to enable effective clinical and translational research. The Hopkins RDRCC competitive renewal comprises an Administrative Core (Core A) led by Drs. Rosen and Bingham, and includes 3 scientific Cores: (i) Core B is the Research Management and Patient Integrated Data (RAPID) Core, led by Dr. Bingham; (ii) Core C is the Sample Processing and Immunoassay Research (SPIRE) Core, led by Drs. Casciola-Rosen and Soloski; and Core D is the Data Science Core, led by Dr. Scott Zeger. The Center is structured as a matrix, designed to foster collaborative and synergistic discovery by maximizing access of the diverse research community to data and samples from humans with rheumatic diseases. Core A will promote efficient, interdisciplinary research throughout the research community and Cores, and manage the enrichment program. Core B will facilitate studies on humans with rheumatic diseases, by providing research management and oversight functions, enhancing research integration with the Epic EHR, and enable patient-centered outcome research. Core C will provide assistance with patient sample acquisition, processing, storage and distribution, as well as provision of multiple immunological assays for discovery and validation of biomarkers and disease pathways. Core D will provide highly innovative tools to enable analysis of complex longitudinal data in rheumatic disease patients, particularly with the design and application of Bayesian hierarchical models to identify disease subsets.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9996485
Project number
5P30AR070254-05
Recipient
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
CLIFTON O BINGHAM
Activity code
P30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$767,757
Award type
5
Project period
2016-09-08 → 2021-06-30