The Lupus Research Alliance (LRA) is pleased to announce the first recipients of the inaugural LRA-BMS Accelerator Award*, a collaborative project with sponsoring partner Bristol Myers Squibb. The Award provides a collective total of $3,000,000 to support nine cutting-edge lupus research projects over two years that focus on understanding t
NEW YORK, July 14, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Alliance For Lupus Research (LRA) is pleased to announce the first recipients of the inaugural LRA-BMS Accelerator Award*, a collaborative project with sponsoring partner Bristol-Myers Squibb. The Award provides a collective total of $3,000,000 to support nine cutting-edge lupus research projects over two years that focus on understanding the underlying causes of systemic and cutaneous lupus, unraveling its complexity, and identifying novel biomarkers. Nine recipients were selected from a large volume of promising applications from throughout the country and abroad. Several researchers are working to understand how the immune system overreacts, while three are testing new markers in the blood and urine that may be used to better diagnose and monitor the disease. Other projects focus on identifying the genetic causes of lupus, and one is looking at how to improve the evaluation of clinical trial results. LRA Chief Scientific Officer Dr. Teodora Staeva commented, “The Lupus Research Alliance is delighted to be partnering with pharmaceutical leader Bristol Myers Squibb to support critical fundamental research that could lead to much-needed new therapies, biomarkers, patient-stratification approaches and outcome measures for lupus.” Peter Schafer, Executive Director, Translational Medicine at BMS, commented, “We’re excited to work with the Lupus Research Alliance on this initiative, as there’s a significant unmet need for people living with lupus. We believe the LRA-BMS Accelerator Award will advance critical research that will help us better understand this devastating disease.” LRA-BMS Award Recipients Characterizing the Immune Response to Lupus Joel Guthridge, PhD, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation Victoria Werth, MD, University of Pennsylvania J. Michelle Kahlenberg, MD, PhD, University of Michigan Evaluating Lupus Biomarkers Ilana Brito, PhD, Cornell University Chandra Mohan, MD, PhD, University of Houston Searching for the Genetic Causes of Lupus Marta Alarcón-Riquelme, MD, PhD, Fundación Pública Andaluza Progreso y Salud Patrick Gaffney, MD, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation Vivian K Kawai, MD, Vanderbilt University Medical Center Improving Clinical Trials Kenneth C Kalunian, MD, University of California, San Diego About the LRA-BMS Accelerator Award The LRA-BMS Accelerator Award was created to fund cutting-edge research projects that focus on understanding the underlying mechanisms of disease, addressing lupus heterogeneity, and identifying novel biomarkers. The initiative aims to stimulate lupus research innovation, accelerate investigation on human lupus rather than relevant model organisms, and realize synergies between academia and industry. A collaboration with the pharmaceutical company Bristol Myers Squibb, the Award provides $300,000 to each awardee over two years. Close oversight is provided by a Joint Steering Committee with equal representation from LRA and BMS. The company will have first right to negotiate with the principal investigators’ institutions for any intellectual property arising from the projects. About Lupus Lupus is a chronic, complex autoimmune disease that affects millions of people worldwide. More than 90 percent of people with lupus are women; lupus most often strikes during the childbearing years of 15-45. African Americans, Latinx, Asians and Native Americans are two to three times at greater risk than Caucasians. In lupus, the immune system, which is designed to protect against infection, creates antibodies that can attack any part of the body including the kidneys, brain, heart, lungs, blood, skin, and joints. About Lupus Research Alliance The Lupus Research Alliance aims to transform treatment while advancing toward a cure by funding the most innovative lupus research in the world. The organization’s stringent peer review grant process fosters diverse scientific talent who are driving discovery toward better diagnostics, improved treatments and ultimately a cure for lupus. Because the Lupus Research Alliance’s Board of Directors fund all administrative and fundraising costs, 100 percent of all donations goes to support lupus research programs. *Formerly the LRA-Celgene Accelerator Award. View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lupus-research-alliance-announces-nine-recipients-of-new-award-in-partnership-with-bristol-myers-squibb-301092656.html SOURCE Lupus Research Alliance |