NIH Awards Grants for Six
New Autism Research Centers
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has awarded grants to support six new
research centers of a major network focusing on the biomedical and behavioral
aspects of autism.
These centers will join two that were funded last year. The overall initiative,
called STAART (Studies to Advance Autism Research and Treatment) Centers
Program, demonstrates NIH commitment to autism research and responds to a need
expressed in the Childrens Health Act of 2000.
NIH expects to spend $65 million over five years for the eight centers.
STAART is funded by the NIH Autism Coordinating Committee (NIH/ACC), which
coordinates autism research conducted by its five member Institutes: The
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development (NICHD), the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders (NIDCD), and the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences (NIEHS).
Each STAART center will contribute to understanding the underlying brain
abnormalities, causes, diagnosis, early detection, prevention, and treatment of
individuals with autism. All of these areas are crucial to learning more about
autism, a brain disorder that affects social, communicative and behavioral
functioning from an early age.
Thomas Insel, M.D., NIMH Director and Chair of the Interagency Autism
Coordinating Committee (IACC) stated, This major network of centers will
accelerate advances in our knowledge about autism causes and treatments and help
us achieve our mission of reducing the burden associated with autism spectrum
disorders.
The six new centers, their directors, and this years grant amounts are:
University of Washington, Geraldine Dawson, Ph.D., $1.6 million; University of
California, Los Angeles, Marian Sigman, Ph.D., $1.4 million; Boston University,
Helen Tager-Flusberg, Ph.D., $1.7 million; University of Rochester, Patricia
Rodier, Ph.D., $1.5 million; Kennedy Krieger Institute, Rebecca Landa, Ph.D.,
$1.5 million; and Mt. Sinai Medical School, Eric Hollander, M.D., $1.6 million.
They join the two STAART centers funded last year at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, directed by Joseph Piven, M.D., and at Yale University,
directed by Fred Volkmar, M.D.
Plans for collaborative projects include multisite clinical trials within the
STAART network, as well as interaction with the Collaborative Programs of
Excellence in Autism (CPEA), ten major research programs funded by the
NICHD/NIDCD Network on the Neurobiology and Genetics of Autism. A data
coordination center will be responsible for both CPEA and STAART networks.
Previous funding for the STAART Centers program included one-year developmental
grants funded at six universities and research institutes to help research teams
prepare applications for future centers.
NIH is the United States Governments primary agency for biomedical and
behavioral research, and is part of the Department of Health and Human Services.
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