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February
23, 2007
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Partners/Harvard
AIDS Clinical Trials Unit receives grant renewal
For 25 years, the MGH has been at the forefront of clinical care and research
of HIV/AIDS and a leader in the development of promising new anti-HIV
therapies. The MGH, along with BWH and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
(BIDMC), together make up the Partners/Harvard AIDS Clinical Trials Unit
(ACTU) one of approximately 25 domestic and 20 international units
that comprise the larger National Institutes of Health (NIH) cooperative
group known as the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG). The ACTG is the
largest clinical trials organization dedicated to HIV/AIDS therapeutics
in the world.
Since 1986, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID),
a division of the NIH, has continuously supported the ACTU's groundbreaking
work. Recently, the NIAID awarded the Partners/Harvard unit a seven-year
renewal grant of approximately $7.5 million to continue exploring new
and better ways of treating patients with HIV/AIDS and advance the scientific
leadership of the ACTG internationally.
Principal investigator of the Partners/Harvard ACTU is Daniel R. Kuritzkes,
MD, director of AIDS Research at BWH and professor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School. He also serves as vice chair and scientific director of
the ACTG. Kuritzkes has provided international leadership in HIV treatment
since the epidemic was
first discovered.
The Partners/Harvard ACTU clinical research site leaders are Rajesh Gandhi,
MD, of MGH; Paul Sax, MD, of BWH; and Mary Albrecht, MD, of BIDMC. Theresa
Flynn, RN, MSN, ANP, of MGH, serves as administrative coordinator. Working
with research nurses, data managers, laboratory technologists and other
medical research personnel, the team supports the goals of the ACTU.
Much of the evidence that underpins current guidelines for HIV treatment
comes from ACTG studies chaired by investigators of the Partners/Harvard
ACTU, including the first trials of combination antiretroviral therapy
and the demonstrated clinical efficacy of protease inhibitors for treatment
of HIV infection.
For more information about the Partners/Harvard ACTU, contact Flynn at
(617) 724-0072.
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