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      Clinical trials proposed for the VA Cooperative Studies Program: Success rates and factors impacting approval

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          Abstract

          The process by which funding organizations select among the myriad number of proposals they receive is a matter of significant concern for researchers and the public alike. Despite an extensive literature on the topic of peer review and publications on criteria by which clinical investigations are reviewed, publications analyzing peer review and other processes leading to government funding decisions on large multi-site clinical trials proposals are sparse. To partially address this gap, we reviewed the outcomes of scientific and programmatic evaluation for all letters of intent (LOIs) received by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Cooperative Studies Program (CSP) between July 4, 2008, and November 28, 2016. If accepted, these LOIs represented initial steps towards later full proposals that also underwent scientific peer review. Twenty-two of 87 LOIs were ultimately funded and executed as CSP projects, for an overall success rate of 25%. Most proposals which received a negative decision did so prior to submission of a full proposal. Common reasons for negative scientific review of LOIs included investigator inexperience, perceived lack of major scientific impact, lack of preliminary data and flawed or confused experimental design, while the most common reasons for negative reviews of final proposals included questions of scientific impact and issues of study design, including outcome measures, randomization, and stratification. Completed projects have been published in high impact clinical journals. Findings highlight several factors leading to successfully obtaining funding support for clinical trials. While our analysis is restricted to trials proposed for CSP, the similarities in review processes with those employed by the National Institutes of Health and the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute suggest the possibility that they may also be important in a broader context.

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          Million Veteran Program: A mega-biobank to study genetic influences on health and disease.

          To describe the design and ongoing conduct of the Million Veteran Program (MVP), as an observational cohort study and mega-biobank in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system.
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            Outcomes after Angiography with Sodium Bicarbonate and Acetylcysteine

            Intravenous sodium bicarbonate and oral acetylcysteine are widely used to prevent acute kidney injury and associated adverse outcomes after angiography without definitive evidence of their efficacy.
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              The Matthew effect in science funding

              Why do scientists with similar backgrounds and abilities often end up achieving very different degrees of success? A classic explanation is that academic achievement exhibits a “Matthew effect”: Early successes increase future success chances. We analyze data from a large academic funding program that present a unique opportunity to quantify the Matthew effect and identify generative mechanisms. Our results show that winners just above the funding threshold accumulate more than twice as much funding during the subsequent eight years as nonwinners with near-identical review scores that fall just below the threshold. This effect is partly caused by nonwinners ceasing to compete for other funding opportunities, revealing a “participation” mechanism driving the Matthew effect. A classic thesis is that scientific achievement exhibits a “Matthew effect”: Scientists who have previously been successful are more likely to succeed again, producing increasing distinction. We investigate to what extent the Matthew effect drives the allocation of research funds. To this end, we assembled a dataset containing all review scores and funding decisions of grant proposals submitted by recent PhDs in a €2 billion granting program. Analyses of review scores reveal that early funding success introduces a growing rift, with winners just above the funding threshold accumulating more than twice as much research funding (€180,000) during the following eight years as nonwinners just below it. We find no evidence that winners’ improved funding chances in subsequent competitions are due to achievements enabled by the preceding grant, which suggests that early funding itself is an asset for acquiring later funding. Surprisingly, however, the emergent funding gap is partly created by applicants, who, after failing to win one grant, apply for another grant less often.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Contemp Clin Trials Commun
                Contemp Clin Trials Commun
                Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications
                Elsevier
                2451-8654
                09 July 2021
                September 2021
                09 July 2021
                : 23
                : 100811
                Affiliations
                [a ]Cooperative Studies Program, Office of Research and Development, Veterans Health Administration, Washington DC, 20420, USA
                [b ]Department of Pathology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. Cooperative Studies Program (10X2), Office of Research and Development, Veterans Health Administration, 810 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington DC, 20420, USA. timothy.oleary@ 123456va.gov tjoleary1@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                S2451-8654(21)00112-5 100811
                10.1016/j.conctc.2021.100811
                8287148
                7f73c4fe-ea7f-43d7-a247-6f1911b6a98b

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 23 August 2020
                : 26 April 2021
                : 21 June 2021
                Categories
                Article

                veterans,peer review,success rates,letters of intent,clinical trials

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