Update on Clinical Research Consortium: Collaborative Research Initiative for Perioperative Clinical and Translational Science Meetingby Michael S. Avidan, MBBCh
Towards the end of last year, a consortium of academic anesthesiology organizations launched an initiative to help establish a clinical trials network in the U.S., which would focus on perioperative medicine, critical care, pain management, and peri- and post-partum care. The consortium included the Association of University Anesthesiologists, Early-Stage Anesthesiology Scholar, the Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research, the International Anesthesia Research Society, and the Society of Critical Care. In conceptualizing this initiative, it was thought that the new clinical trials network could naturally collaborate with other existing international networks. There was a call for submissions of clinical research proposals. Despite a tight deadline, seasoned anesthesiology investigators around the United States submitted 17 letters of intent and brief proposals for pragmatic trials. The proposals are all high caliber, and all focus on outcomes that are clinically relevant and important to society. At very short notice, a study section was assembled to rank these, and to solicit expanded proposals from six of the 17 applications. From the six finalists, the study section will select three proposals. Two world experts in clinical and translational research are leading the study section. The other members of the study section are academic leaders representing the organizations that are spearheading this initiative. The clinical research consortium will be formally launched at an exciting symposium on May 1, 2018, from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm, following the IARS, AUA and SOCCA Annual Meetings in Chicago. This meeting will be open to all those interested in anesthesiology-related clinical and translational science. The agenda for the symposium will include:
There is tremendous excitement regarding this clinical trials initiative in Anesthesiology, and if it is successful, it will be an important catalyst for advancing academic anesthesiology and for providing a platform for addressing some of the most relevant research questions confronting our field. Author |