Stanford Alzheimer's Disease Research Center - Call for Proposals
Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC)
Developmental Projects for Alzheimer’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease related disorders (AD/ADRD) ($250,000)
Deadline: Monday, March 30, 2020
**Updated March 11, 2020
Amount of funding and budget information:
Applicants may request up to $250K in direct costs for two years (range, one-to-three years) under this program. The Stanford ADRC plans to fund two developmental projects this year. The budget period is anticipated to begin 5/01/20.
Eligibility:
All Stanford faculty (UTL, MCL, NTL-Research, CE). Awards are intended primarily for junior faculty investigators, but senior faculty investigators whose research is primarily in areas other than AD/ADRD are eligible, as are senior postdoctoral fellows or instructors transitioning to an academic position (or the equivalent). The expectation is that proposed research will allow the investigator to develop preliminary data sufficient for the basis of an application for independent support. An investigator is eligible only once for development project support. You do not have to submit your applications through your RPM.
Purpose:
The Stanford ADRC focuses on Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment, Parkinson’s disease, Lewy body disease, and healthy aging. Proposals should describe innovative basic, clinical, behavioral, translational, epidemiologic, caregiving, or educational research likely to advance the understanding of the basic and clinical underpinnings of Alzheimer’s disease and related cognitive disorders (including Lewy body neurocognitive disorders); aid in prevention or treatment; or enhance caregiving, community outreach and education. Preference is given to proposals that use data and resources from the Stanford ADRC, including clinical data; biological specimens (e.g., blood, DNA, CSF, stool microbiome, skin fibroblasts, autopsy tissues), imaging data (including structural MR and amyloid-PET), and biostatistical resources; or that use data and resources of the National Alzheimer Coordinating Center (https://www.alz.washington.edu/), National Centralized Repository for AD (NCRAD) (https://ncrad.iu.edu/), and the National Institute on Aging Genetics of AD Data Storage (NIAGADS), (https://www.niagads.org/).
This funding mechanism is intended to allow an investigator the opportunity to develop robust preliminary data sufficient to provide the basis for an application for independent research support from the NIH or other agency. Developmental project grants are designed for 1) junior faculty level investigators and 2) for more senior investigators who have experience in areas other than Alzheimer’s disease or Lewy body research, and who want to work in the Alzheimer research field broadly defined or want to try a new hypothesis, method, or approach that is not an extension of ongoing Alzheimer or Lewy body research.
Contact/Questions:
Programmatic questions should be directed to Dr. Katrin Andreasson, chair of the Developmental Project Review Committee (kandreas@stanford.edu), administrative questions to Nusha Askari (askarin@stanford.edu), Senior Administrator of the ADRC.
If selected and funded:
Funding is contingent upon receipt of all required documents and protocols, and verification of approved protocols should be submitted to Nusha Askari at the ADRC. An annual report and final progress report in NIH format will also be due to Nusha Askari. A presentation of progress is required, usually at the time of the annual site visit of the ADRC External Advisory Board.
To submit an application:
By Monday March 30, 2020, please submit one PDF file containing the following in the order listed below via email to:
Nusha Askari, Stanford ARDC, askarin@stanford.edu
1) Title page
Stanford Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Developmental Projects 2020
Project Title:
Project Leader Name, Title, department, address, phone number, email
Co-Investigator(s): Name, Title, department, address, phone number, email
2) Project summary or abstract
Include project title (up to 30 lines)
3) Research proposal
Specific Aims and Research Strategy (consisting of Significance, Innovation, and Approach), together limited to 3 pages, including any tables and figures. Bibliography/References (does not count against the 3-page limit). Use standard NIH page formatting.
4) Detailed budget
Up to $250,000 direct costs
Budget period: 5/01/20 to 4/30/22 (or other one to three year period, as appropriate).
Please note: you do not have to have your RPM prepare your budget now, but if approved we will need to submit an official budget to the NIH (the ADRC will do that).
5) Budget justification (1 page, NIH format)
6) NIH-format biosketch for the project leader and co-investigators
For a template and sample biosketch see this NIH webpage: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/424/index.htm#biosketch
7) Other support (NIH format) for project leader and co-investigators
Please include both active and pending support
Selection process:
The ADRC Developmental Project Review Committee will review and recommend action on all Developmental Project applications. You will receive a notification of selection by the end of April 2020.
Note: the release of funds after selection is contingent upon formal approval of the National Institute on Aging and verification by ADRC of the recipient's human subject, SCRO, and animal subject approvals and compliance with other administrative issues.
For any non-faculty awardees, before funding can be released, as per Stanford policy, we will require a letter of support from the faculty mentor or department chair who will have oversight of expenditures via Stanford's system.
- Alzheimer’s disease and related cognitive disorders (including Lewy body neurocognitive disorders)
- basic, clinical, behavioral, translational, epidemiologic, caregiving, or educational research
- Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment, Parkinson’s disease, Lewy body disease, and healthy aging
All Stanford faculty (UTL, MCL, NTL-Research, CE). Awards are intended primarily for junior faculty investigators, but senior faculty investigators whose research is primarily in areas other than AD/ADRD are eligible, as are senior postdoctoral fellows or instructors transitioning to an academic position (or the equivalent).
1) Title page
Stanford Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Developmental Projects 2020
Project Title:
Project Leader Name, Title, department, address, phone number, email
Co-Investigator(s): Name, Title, department, address, phone number, email
2) Project summary or abstract
Include project title (up to 30 lines)
3) Research proposal
Specific Aims and Research Strategy (consisting of Significance, Innovation, and Approach), together limited to 3 pages, including any tables and figures. Bibliography/References (does not count against the 3-page limit). Use standard NIH page formatting.
4) Detailed budget
Up to $250,000 direct costs
Budget period: 5/01/20 to 4/30/22 (or other one to three year period, as appropriate).
Please note: you do not have to have your RPM prepare your budget now, but if approved we will need to submit an official budget to the NIH (the ADRC will do that).
5) Budget justification (1 page, NIH format)
6) NIH-format biosketch for the project leader and co-investigators
For a template and sample biosketch see this NIH webpage: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/424/index.htm#biosketch
7) Other support (NIH format) for project leader and co-investigators
Please include both active and pending support
Note: the release of funds after selection is contingent upon formal approval of the National Institute on Aging and verification by ADRC of the recipient's human subject, SCRO, and animal subject approvals and compliance with other administrative issues.
For any non-faculty awardees, before funding can be released, as per Stanford policy, we will require a letter of support from the faculty mentor or department chair who will have oversight of expenditures via Stanford's system.
The expectation is that proposed research will allow the investigator to develop preliminary data sufficient for the basis of an application for independent support. An investigator is eligible only once for development project support.
Preference is given to proposals that use data and resources from the Stanford ADRC, including clinical data; biological specimens (e.g., blood, DNA, CSF, stool microbiome, skin fibroblasts, autopsy tissues), imaging data (including structural MR and amyloid-PET), and biostatistical resources; or that use data and resources of the National Alzheimer Coordinating Center (https://www.alz.washington.edu/), National Centralized Repository for AD (NCRAD) (https://ncrad.iu.edu/), and the National Institute on Aging Genetics of AD Data Storage (NIAGADS), (https://www.niagads.org/).
This funding mechanism is intended to allow an investigator the opportunity to develop robust preliminary data sufficient to provide the basis for an application for independent research support from the NIH or other agency. Developmental project grants are designed for 1) junior faculty level investigators and 2) for more senior investigators who have experience in areas other than Alzheimer’s disease or Lewy body research, and who want to work in the Alzheimer research field broadly defined or want to try a new hypothesis, method, or approach that is not an extension of ongoing Alzheimer or Lewy body research.
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