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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. Translational Research Institute
  3. Author: David Robinson
  4. Page 17

David Robinson

UAMS Cancer Researcher Receives $1.1 Million as Part of NIH Grant at UA, Fayetteville

Isabelle Racine Miousse, Ph.D., is studying the role of a common nutrient in cancer in cancer treatment.
Isabelle Racine Miousse, Ph.D., is studying the role of a common nutrient in cancer treatment.

A National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant will allow UAMS researcher Isabelle Racine Miousse, Ph.D., to ramp up her study of a nutrient that may have a role in the effectiveness of immunotherapy for cancer patients.

Miousse will receive $220,000 per year for up to five years as one of four project leaders at the Arkansas Integrative Metabolic Research Center, a new NIH-funded Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. The university announced April 6 that the center will receive $10.8 million over five years.

The funding will support Miousse’s preclinical cancer studies involving methionine, an amino acid important for human growth and derived primarily from consuming meat.

Miousse, an assistant professor in the UAMS College of Medicine Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, will test whether reducing dietary methionine can improve results of immunotherapy drugs used to treat melanoma patients.

“This has never been tried in combination with immunotherapy drugs,” Miousse said, noting that immunotherapy alone works remarkably well, but only for 50% of melanoma patients. “So far the results of this research are very encouraging, and I am hopeful that this next phase of study will take us into clinical trials.”

Unlike most cancer treatments, she notes, this one has beneficial side effects.

“Reducing methionine in the diet promotes the metabolism of fats and sugars in animal models,” Miousse said. “Methionine restriction could fight cancer and improve general health at the same time.”

Miousse’s work has been supported by the UAMS Translational Research Institute’s two-year KL2 Mentored Research Career Development Award for promising early career researchers. The KL2 provides salary support, research seed funding of $50,000 and translational research training. The institute is supported by a Clinical and Translational Science Award from the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Nationally Recognized Grant-Writing Expert Peg AtKisson to Lead Free UAMS Workshop

(Image credit: Robinson, David S)

UAMS-affiliated faculty researchers in full time positions are invited to attend a free, virtual workshop led by nationally recognized grant-writing expert Peg AtKisson, Ph.D., Monday, May 24 – Thursday, May 27, 9 – 11 a.m. each day.

This UAMS Research Academy workshop is open to a limited number of attendees and will prioritize assistant and associate professors who are planning to submit a NIH R01 grant application for the February 2022 deadline. Since slots are limited, early sign-ups are encouraged.

REGISTER HERE

Attendees may also nominate themselves for Research Academy Scholars positions. The six-to-eight selected scholars will receive continued grant-writing assistance from the AtKisson Training Group through the fall in preparation for their R01 submission. Attendance at the May event is highly encouraged for those interested in applying for the Research Academy Scholars program. More information about the Research Academy Scholars program will be released in early June.

The Research Academy and workshop are sponsored by UAMS’ Division of Research & Innovation, Translational Research Institute, and Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. 

For questions about the program, please contact Paul Duguid (pduguid@uams.edu).  

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Read the March TRIbune

https://tri.uams.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/2103226-TRIbune-MARCH-2021_WEB.pdf

The March TRIbune newsletter arrived with a timely update on the work of UAMS early career researchers in the Health Sciences Innovation and Entrepreneurship (HSIE) Scholars program for postdoctoral fellows.

Check out how this innovative new program is affecting UAMS’ research enterprise and the progress of the talented scholars who are wrapping up the second and final year of the program.

Read The TRIbune.

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

The February TRIbune Is Here!

(Image credit: Robinson, David S)

In just one year, five UAMS clinicians have identified patient care gaps and have already begun implementing strategies for improving outcomes. 

The clinicians, who make up the inaugural class of the UAMS Implementation Science Scholars Program, have impressed their mentors, program leaders and, more recently, an outside evaluator.  Read the full story in The TRIbune.  e

Filed Under: News, Newsroom

Hendrix Students Learning Translational Research in UAMS Partnership

Through a partnership with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), Hendrix College students have a unique opportunity to address a critical human health issue in the new Clinical and Translational Research Immersion (CTRI) Program.

Andres Caro, Ph.D., a professor of chemistry at Hendrix, is leading the educational components of the program in collaboration with the UAMS-administered Arkansas IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (Arkansas INBRE) and the UAMS Translational Research Institute. It is supported by a $165,326 grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The program began in the fall 2020 semester with three students interested in biomedical science careers; three additional students joined this semester, and three more will participate this summer. Caro noted that there are few opportunities for undergraduate students to conduct translational research, which includes human study participants. Translational research is the process of rapidly applying new knowledge and discoveries to deliver treatments or practices that improve health.

“Translational medicine is the future of therapy, and the CTRI Program will introduce Hendrix students to this cutting-edge field,” Caro said.
The program is providing the students with a team-based translational research experience as part of an ongoing opioid study that involves eight UAMS researchers.

Arkansas INBRE’s mission is to build biomedical research capacity across the state. Lawrence Cornett, Ph.D., director, said the CTRI program is a great addition to INBRE’s efforts.

Increasing the number of future researchers is also a focus of the Translational Research Institute.

“We’re excited to be part of this collaboration,” said Laura James, M.D., director of the institute. “It allows us a unique opportunity to teach the principles of translational research beyond UAMS. This is crucial to expanding the research education pipeline and developing future translational scientists.”

The project also enables the expansion of an ongoing study of neonatal opioid drug withdrawal, led by Clare Nesmith, M.D., an associate professor in the College of Medicine Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatology. The addition of a second clinical site at the University of Louisville will allow investigators to better understand factors that predict the development of neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome in newborns. Lori Devlin, D.O., an associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatal Medicine, and Janice Sullivan, M.D., a professor and vice chair for Pediatrics Research in the Department of Pediatrics, are leading the study at the University of Louisville site.

The Arkansas INBRE program involves most of the state’s universities and colleges working toward the same goal of encouraging interest in and supporting cutting-edge scientific research that, ultimately, benefits the state as a whole.

“Research experiences are widely recognized to benefit undergraduate students in a number of ways,” Caro said. “Students who conduct research are more likely to complete a baccalaureate degree, pursue additional training in either graduate school or professional school, and go on to a career in research.”

Arkansas INBRE is funded under the NIH Institutional Development Award Program, or IDeA. The UAMS-based Arkansas INBRE program manages the initiative for partners that include the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, Arkansas State University, Hendrix College, Ouachita Baptist University, John Brown University, the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and others. Along with UAMS, the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville participates as a research-intensive institution.

The Translational Research Institute is supported by the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

A private liberal arts college in Conway, Arkansas, Hendrix College consistently earns recognition as one of the country’s leading liberal arts institutions, and is featured in Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think About Colleges. Its academic quality and rigor, innovation and value have established Hendrix as a fixture in numerous college guides, lists and rankings. Founded in 1876, Hendrix has been affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1884. To learn more, visit www.hendrix.edu.

UAMS is the state’s only health sciences university, with colleges of Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Health Professions and Public Health; a graduate school; hospital; a main campus in Little Rock; a Northwest Arkansas regional campus in Fayetteville; a statewide network of regional campuses; and seven institutes: the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, Jackson T. Stephens Spine & Neurosciences Institute, Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute, Psychiatric Research Institute, Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging, Translational Research Institute and Institute for Digital Health & Innovation. UAMS includes UAMS Health, a statewide health system that encompasses all of UAMS’ clinical enterprise including its hospital, regional clinics and clinics it operates or staffs in cooperation with other providers. UAMS is the only adult Level 1 trauma center in the state. U.S. News & World Report named UAMS Medical Center the state’s Best Hospital; ranked its ear, nose and throat program among the top 50 nationwide; and named six areas as high performing — COPD, colon cancer surgery, heart failure, hip replacement, knee replacement and lung cancer surgery. UAMS has 2,876 students, 898 medical residents and four dental residents. It is the state’s largest public employer with more than 10,000 employees, including 1,200 physicians who provide care to patients at UAMS, its regional campuses, Arkansas Children’s Hospital, the VA Medical Center and Baptist Health. Visit www.uams.edu or www.uamshealth.com. Find us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube or Instagram.

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

TRI Names Seven Community/Academic Partnerships for Training and Potential Research Funding

Illustration showing diverse group

The UAMS Translational Research Institute (TRI) Community Engagement Program has selected seven teams of community members and researchers that have partnered to participate in training and jointly develop community-based participatory research projects.

The Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) Scholars teams will work through learning modules and participate in online discussions and mentoring to develop health disparities research projects in competition for pilot grants up to $50,000. The teams will learn to apply the principles of CBPR, a collaborative approach that works to involve all partners throughout the research process. Starting with a health-related research topic that is important to the community, the teams will use their new knowledge to improve health outcomes and reduce health disparities.

“The CBPR Scholars program marks an exciting milestone for us,” said Kate Stewart, M.D., M.P.H., director of the TRI Community Engagement Program. “It is the next big step in our years-long efforts to engage Arkansans in the research we do at UAMS. We are very excited about the diversity of the seven partnerships that are participating in the program and we look forward to working with them to develop research-based, sustainable health improvements.”

The academic/community partnership teams are:

  • Academic: Gerry Ezell, M.D., Jennifer Naylor, Ph.D.
    Community: River City Ministries: Paul Wilkerson and Steven Morris                                       
  • Academic: Brooke Montgomery, Ph.D.
    Community: Our House: Maureen Martin
  • Academic: Sanjay Maraboyina, M.D.,  Analiz Rodriguez, M.D., Ph.D., Cynthia Dillport, LCSW, and Harriet Farley, LCSW
    Community: Home for Healing: Ronnie Fehrenbach and Goodness Village: Janet Webb
  • Academic: Eva Woodward, Ph.D., Jennifer Gan, and Irenia Ball
    Community: AR Freedom Fund: Rae Brown, Anthony Smith and Heather Brown
  • Academic: Melissa Zielinski, Ph.D., Katy Allison, Ph.D.
    Community: AR Foundation for Suicide Prevention: Susie Reece and Wendy Thompson
  • Academic:  Wendy Nembhard, Ph.D.,  Katie Brown, O.D., Kirk Leach, Ph.D. (UALR), Jennifer Gan, Leah Dawson, Ph.D., Joe Schaffner, Maria Ruvalcaba
    Community: Shepherd’s Hope: Sofia Dulanto, Amy Ford (Baptist Health)
  • Academic: Deanna King, M.D., Ph.D.,  Charia Hall, Au.D., Rachel Glade, Ph.D. (University of Arkansas, Fayetteville)
    Community: AR Hands and Voices: Mandy Jay, Liana Robbins

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

Four Receive Implementation Science Pilot Grants

Geoffrey Curran, Ph.D., who leads the Implementation Science program, talks about plans for the program in this 2019 file photo of a TRI planning retreat.
Geoffrey Curran, Ph.D., who leads the Implementation Science program, talks about plans for the program in this 2019 file photo of a TRI planning retreat.

TRI announced today that four UAMS researchers have been awarded pilot grants of up to $50,000 each to help improve health services through the implementation of  evidence-based medical practices.

The awards are made to projects with the strongest likelihood of leading to improved health and health care.

Implementation science is the study of methods to promote the systematic uptake of research findings and other evidence-based practices into routine practice to improve the quality and effectiveness of health services.

The awardees are:

Kocurek
Kocurek

Emily Kocurek, M.D., Assistant Professor, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, College of Medicine; “Implementation of a UAMS Pulmonary Embolism Response Team (PERT) with Expansion to a Statewide Arkansas Pulmonary Embolism Response Tele-Network.”

Samanta
Samanta

Debopam Samanta, M.D., Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine; Chief, Child Neurology (Interim), Arkansas Children’s Hospital and UAMS; “Qualitative Assessment of Stigma Experience and Self-Management of Epilepsy in the African-American Population and Implementation of an Adapted Booster Telehealth Intervention.”

Swindle

Taren Swindle, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Research and Evaluation Division, and Department of Pediatrics, Developmental Nutrition, College of Medicine; Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, UAMS College of Public Health; “Assessing the Feasibility and Acceptability of a Virtual Approach to De-implementation of Inappropriate Feeding Practices in Early Care and Education”

Veerapandiyan
Veerapandiyan (Image credit: Robinson, David S)

Aravindhan Veerapandiyan, M.D., Assistant Professor, Pediatric Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine; “Psychological Health in Children with Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophy.” 

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

Read the Latest TRIbune

(Image credit: Robinson, David S)

In this issue we highlight two COVID-19 research studies supported by NIH Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) grants. Researchers at the UAMS Northwest Campus hope their grant can help prevent a repeat of last spring, when COVID-19 washed through local Marshallese and Latinx communities like a tsunami. Researchers at the UAMS College of Public Health are part of another RADx study that includes institutions from five states and focuses on individuals with a history of incarceration and low-income Latinx communities.

We also name our five new 2021 Implementation Science scholars and two awardees of mini-grants for underrepresented faculty researchers. Our Study of the Month features Ryan Dare, M.D., who is leading the Phase 3 Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV-1 IM) trial.  Read The TRIbune.

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

TRI Employee’s Good Deeds Garner UAMS MVP Award

TRI’s Sharon Martin receives UAMS MVP of Month Award from Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA.

As part of her UAMS job, Sharon Martin talks to many Arkansans who are struggling, but a recent call with an elderly Little Rock woman was different.

Martin, based at the UAMS East Regional Campus in Helena-West Helena, works as a research coordinator for the UAMS Rural Research Network within the Translational Research Institute, contacting potential research participants. On Nov. 4, she was calling prospects about a UAMS diabetes study when one of the contacts revealed her dire situation.

The woman, who declined to be identified publicly, told Martin that she and her two dogs were freezing and began to cry. Martin learned that she was without insulin for her diabetes, that her home’s gas had been shut off due to a leak she could not afford to fix, and that she was hungry, with no way to cook or heat food. She was also grieving, having recently lost her husband and mother.

“I run across many people to help, but this one really tugged at my heartstrings, and she was in an unsafe situation,” Martin said.

Given the urgency, she immediately contacted local resources in central Arkansas to assist. A friend helped get the woman’s insulin supply restored at a low monthly cost, and one of Martin’s many former foster children who lives in central Arkansas provided food, a microwave, and a space heater while a local contractor fixed her gas leak at no cost.

Martin has traveled to Little Rock twice to see her, once with her local 4H chapter the day before Thanksgiving. She continues to check on her twice a week by phone.

Her actions did not go unnoticed; she got a surprise visit Thursday from Chancellor Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA, who presented her with the UAMS MVP Award.

Becky Hall, Ed.D., center director at the UAMS East Regional Campus, said Martin’s big heart is no surprise to her.  

“She is one of the very most caring, loving, and action-oriented people I have ever met,” Hall said. “She always puts the needs of others before her own, many times spending her hard-earned money to help someone in need.”

Hall said Martin also identified a single dad of a young girl who did not have any food in his house.

“We helped gather food, and Sharon rallied our staff to pitch in to buy his little girl a coat, several outfits, shoes, a backpack, and toiletries,” Hall said. “She is an amazing lady.”

“Compassion is a core value of UAMS and its employees,” Patterson said in his announcement about Martin. “Thank you, Sharon, for putting such heart into your work and caring for others like you do.”

Martin will be recognized in several ways as January’s MVP. Her photo will be posted on the Employee Appreciation Wall outside the Chancellor’s Suite in the Central Building. She will receive free parking for a month. She will be featured in a Faces of UAMS video and receive some great UAMS swag. She will also be presented with a certificate and monetary award at an upcoming UAMS cabinet meeting and will be honored at the year-end MVP luncheon.

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

The TRIbune Is Here!

(Image credit: Robinson, David S)

The November-December issue of The TRIbune reports on the important contributions to national COVID-19 research platforms made by Fred Prior, Ph.D., and Ahmad Baghal, M.D., Ph.D., through their TRI-supported biomedical informatics programs.

We also report on a NCATS/CTSA award to Hari Eswaran, Ph.D., enabling telehealth research that could improve maternal health for rural Arkansas women. Our Study of the Month features Allen Sherman, Ph.D., who used the ARresearch registry to conduct a COVID-19-related survey of Arkansans. Read The TRIbune

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom

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