Funded Projects
Explore our currently funded projects. You may search with all three fields, then focus your results by applying any of the dropdown filters. After customizing your search, you may download results and even save your specific search for later.
Project # | Project Title | Research Focus Area | Research Program | Administering IC | Institution(s) | Investigator(s) | Location(s) | Year Awarded |
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1R34DA050267-01
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2/5 Establishing Innovative Approaches for the HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | DUKE UNIVERSITY | SMITH, PHILLIP BRIAN | Durham, NC | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (Collaborative R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-029 Summary: A more than 5-fold increase in the incidence of neonatal abstinence syndrome has been reported since 2000. Preliminary studies show that prenatal opioid exposure is associated with increased risk of impaired neurodevelopment. Five institutions (Duke University, Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) have formed a consortium to develop strategies for the Phase II HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study. Research teams will develop instruments and strategies (recruitment/retention protocols, assessment batteries, and novel tools); conduct pilot studies (fetal and postnatal imaging, advanced imaging harmonization and quality control, assessment administration, biosampling) to evaluate instruments; and analyze available data, including imaging, behavioral, cognitive, and maternal data from studies on early brain development, to guide the Phase II study design. Upon completion, the consortium aims to conduct the Phase II study. |
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1R34DA050287-01
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4/4 Investigation of opioid exposure and neurodevelopment (iOPEN) | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE | THOMASON, MORIAH E (contact); BERGINK, VEERLE | New York, NY | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (Collaborative R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-029 Summary: Rates of neonatal abstinence syndrome have reached a staggering 6.5 per 1,000 births nationwide, creating an urgent need to identify how in-utero exposure to opioids and associated risk factors influence the developing brain. A multidisciplinary team will address these challenges in Oregon, a state particularly hard hit by the opioid epidemic. Through linking sites, the impact of the Phase I project is enhanced and will provide critical information to support a national-level effort for Phase II of the HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study. Aim 1 will develop, implement, and evaluate innovative recruitment and retention strategies for high-risk populations. Aim 2 will address anticipated challenges of the planned Phase II study by implementing and evaluating a multi-site, standardized research protocol including multimodal MRI of placenta, fetus, neonate, and 24-month-old brain; biospecimen collection; and assessment of substance use and other key domains. Aim 3 will evaluate data acquisition, processing, and statistical considerations to maximize data quality, usability, and integration across sites. |
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1R34DA050297-01
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A feasibility study of novel technologies to minimize motion-induced biases in functional and structural MRI of young, opioid-affected cohorts | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA | TISDALL, MATTHEW DYLAN (contact); MACKEY, ALLYSON PATRICIA | Philadelphia, PA | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-036 Summary: Structural and functional neuroimaging measures are prone to errors induced by subject motion. Many comorbid features of opioid exposure are likely to increase children’s in-scanner motion. In total, this raises substantial concern that existing neuroimaging methods are not sufficiently motion-robust to be used in studies of children ages 3–5. Researchers will address these concerns with a feasibility study, comparing the existing methods developed for the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study with novel methods we will develop and optimize for young children. They will evaluate research methods in a sample of 100 children and test whether novel technologies improve the quality of the raw imaging data and reduce motion biases in the derived measures. Researchers will determine predictors of successful imaging to inform sampling strategies in future studies. The primary outcomes will be novel, validated structural and functional neuroimaging imaging methods for young children and feasibility data to inform the design of future studies addressing developmental questions, particularly those related to opioid exposure. |
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1R34DA050268-01
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4/5 Establishing Innovative Approaches for the HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | CINCINNATI CHILDRENS HOSP MED CTR | MERHAR, STEPHANIE L (contact); VANNEST, JENNIFER J | Cincinnati, OH | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (Collaborative R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-029 Summary: A more than 5-fold increase in the incidence of neonatal abstinence syndrome has been reported since 2000. Preliminary studies show that prenatal opioid exposure is associated with increased risk of impaired neurodevelopment. Five institutions (Duke University, Arkansas Children’s Research Institute, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) have formed a consortium to develop strategies for the Phase II HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study. Research teams will develop instruments and strategies (recruitment/retention protocols, assessment batteries, and novel tools); conduct pilot studies (fetal and postnatal imaging, advanced imaging harmonization and quality control, assessment administration, biosampling) to evaluate instruments; and analyze available data, including imaging, behavioral, cognitive, and maternal data from studies on early brain development, to guide the Phase II study design. Upon completion, the consortium aims to conduct the Phase II study. |
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1R01HD096798-01
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SAFETY, PHARMACOKINETICS AND EFFICACY OF EXTENDED-RELEASE NALTREXONE IN PREGNANT WOMEN WITH OPIOID USE DISORDER | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | NICHD | Boston Medical Center | WACHMAN, ELISHA | Boston, MA | 2018 | |
NOFO Title: Opioid Use Disorder in Pregnancy (R01)
NOFO Number: RFA-HD-18-036 Summary: Opioid use disorders (OUDs) in pregnancy are a U.S. public health crisis; the current standard of care is treatment with an opioid agonist such as buprenorphine (BPH), which has an associated risk for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) and possible long-term neurodevelopmental consequences. As a novel treatment option for OUD in pregnancy, naltrexone would not expose the developing fetus to opioids, greatly reducing the risk for NAS and potentially improving maternal and infant outcomes. This study will evaluate the safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacogenomics of naltrexone for pregnant women with OUDs, evaluating comprehensive mother-infant outcomes throughout the pregnancy and first year after birth. It will enroll 50 pregnant women stabilized pre-pregnancy on extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX) and 50 comparison women on BPH from Boston Medical Center and the University of North Carolina in this multi-center prospective comparative cohort study. |
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1R34DA050266-01
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2/2 Optimizing access, engagement and assessment to elucidate prenatal influences on neurodevelopment: The Brains Begin Before Birth (B4) Midwest Consortium | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AT CHICAGO | WAKSCHLAG, LAUREN S | Evanston, IL | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (Collaborative R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-029 Summary: Though prenatal exposure to opioids and other substances have adverse effects on neurodevelopment, advances in neuroimaging and developmentally sensitive phenotypic measurement now enable characterization of typical and atypical brain-behavior pathways on an unprecedented scale. The Brains Begin Before Birth (B4) Midwest Consortium, a partnership of neuroscience, substance use, perinatal mental health, and child welfare scientists at Washington University School of Medicine (WUSM) and neuroscience, bioethics, pediatric population health, maternal-fetal, and addiction scientists at Northwestern University (NU). This regional consortium will leverage the contrasting approaches of Illinois (punitive) and Missouri (non-punitive) to prenatal opioid use, providing a platform for examining the impact of jurisdictional variations on science and practice. The consortium provide a framework for addressing three major areas of challenge: (1) legal/ethical, (2) recruitment/retention, and (3) imaging/assessment methods. |
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1R34DA050270-01
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1/3 Promoting Resilience in Children: Protocol Development for a Birth Cohort Study To Assess Factors Impacting Neurodevelopment | Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids | HEALthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) Study | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON | GOLDSTEIN, ELLEN (contact); ZGIERSKA, ALEKSANDRA EWA | Madison, WI | 2019 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HEALthy BCD) (Collaborative R34 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-029 Summary: The first ten years of life are accompanied by rapid changes to the developing brain and cognitive abilities. Complex interacting factors including genetics, early-life exposure to substances, family and social interactions, and home and community environments can affect brain and cognitive development. Three linked projects aim to develop effective research protocols to lay a foundation for a future HEALthy Brain and Cognitive Development (HBCD) birth cohort study. Project 1 will develop protocols for recruitment and retention of a diverse sample of pregnant and postpartum women with oversampling of mothers with prenatal opioid use. Project 2 will identify ethical, legal, and regulatory challenges for investigations in this vulnerable population and define effective solutions to enable recruitment and study of these participants. Project 3 will develop and evaluate protocols for acquiring high-quality, quantitative neuroimaging measures with magnetic resonance imaging and functional near infrared spectroscopy and assess effective strategies for measuring cognitive performance in young children, including those exposed to opioids. |