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The Costs of Research Funding Delays at NIH – Grayson Logue

The Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC) at the University of Pittsburgh is one of the country’s hubs for researchers working to improve detection and treatment for a disease that afflicts nearly 7 million Americans.  

Anne Cohen—an ADRC faculty member who leads work on neuroimaging and identifying biomarkers of Alzheimer’s in patients—uses positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of research participants’ brains to work on the early detection of the disease before cognitive symptoms emerge. Cohen has been busy over the last two months, not with her own research, but trying to keep the ARDC open. 

The ADRC, like the other 35 Alzheimer’s research centers across the country, relies on funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Cohen had counted on the arrival of funding from a five-year grant renewal submitted in June to the National Institute on Aging that was favorably evaluated, or “scored,” in the fall by a peer review committee. “The expectation was that we would continue to operate as our center always has,” Cohen told The Dispatch. But the federal dollars never came through, and Cohen and her colleagues are scrambling to retain staff while operating with less than a third of their normal budget—the center’s budget is typically $300,000 a month but is now operating at $115,000 a month from donated funds. 

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