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NIAAA Director's Report on Institute Activities to the National Advisory Council on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism - September 19, 2002


CONTENTS

Announcement

OFFICE and DIVISION ACTIVITIES

STAFF NOTES

    New NIAAA Director

- Office of the Director

- Staffing Update

 

- Office of Collaborative Research

- Honors and Awards

NIH Highlights

- Office of Policy and Public Liaison

 

 

- Office of Scientific Affairs

 

NIAAA Highlights

- Division of Basic Research

 

    Budget Update

- Division of Biometry and Epidemiology

 

 

- Division of Clinical and Prevention Research

 

   

- Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research

 
 

 

 


ANNOUNCEMENT

Appointment Of NIAAA Director

The appointment of Ting-Kai Li, M.D. as the new director of the NIH’s National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) was announced by National Institutes of Health Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. on September 10. Dr. Li is currently Distinguished Professor, Department of Medicine, and of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, where he also serves as Director of the Indiana Alcohol Research Center.

The author of more than 400 journal articles and book chapters, Dr. Li has produced ground-breaking research in several areas, including alcohol metabolism and animal models of alcoholism. He is a major participant in two NIAAA-supported research consortia — the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) and the Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism (INIA).

Dr. Li received his medical degree from Harvard University in 1959. He joined the faculty of Indiana University School of Medicine in 1971 and served as the Associate Dean for Research from 1986-2000. Recognition of Dr. Li’s research accomplishments include: the Markle Scholar in Academic Medicine, the Research Society on Alcoholism Award for Research Excellence; the James B. Isaacson Award for Research in Chemical Dependency Disease; the Jellinek Award; the R. Brinkley Smithers Distinguished Scientist Award; an Honorary Degree (D.Sc.) from Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine; and the Mark Keller Honorary Lecture Award. Dr. Li is an Honorary Fellow of the Society for the Study of Addiction (UK); and is a member of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences. He is the current Editor of the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.

NIH HIGHLIGHTS

NIH Consensus Panel on the Management of Hepatitis C

An update of the 1997 NIH Consensus Conference on the Management of Hepatitis C was held on June 10 - 12 at the Natcher Conference Center, NIH. Knowledge of Hepatitis C has increased dramatically over the past 5 years. At the same time, prevalence of Hepatitis C infections has increased leading to the need to re-examine management and treatment options. NIAAA, along with several other NIH Institutes, co-sponsored this 2-day public conference. After hearing from a broad cross section of experts, a consensus statement regarding management, treatment options, and potential candidates for treatment was developed. Issues related to treatment of individuals consuming alcohol were addressed, as were recommendations for future research on alcohol and Hepatitis C. The panel concluded that a history of alcohol abuse is not an absolute contraindication to therapy, but safe levels of alcohol consumption are still unclear. In conjunction with the Consensus Conference, NIAAA convened a multidisciplinary Working Group to address questions specific to alcohol and Hepatitis C. Dr. Diane Lucas, Division of Basic Research, NIAAA, organized and conducted the meeting that focused on identifying fundamental and translational research directions. The Consensus Statement will be widely distributed and can be viewed at on the NIH Web site at https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20080916102427/http://consensus.nih.gov/cons/116/116cdc_intro.htm.


NIH Roadmap Process

NIH Director, Elias Zerhouni, M.D., began a leadership process soon after he arrived to develop what he calls a "roadmap initiative"—a compelling vision for the next three to five years that will have the greatest impact on people's health. Dr. Zerhouni feels very strongly about the importance of reaching out and including the external research community in the process. In August, he held five meetings that included scientists from NIH and extramural scientists from around the country. He asked each roadmap group to identify the most important issues facing medical research today, including the most promising opportunities and the roadblocks to progress. Hundreds of ideas flowed from the meeting and common themes began to emerge.

As a second step in this process, Institute and Center Directors met the first week in September in the NIH Leadership Forum to discuss the themes and ideas that emerged from the roadmap meetings. It is too early to identify specific actions, but broad common themes clearly emerged from the meting that were consistent with the themes that the roadmap groups identified, such as:  clinical research, interdisciplinary research, research resources, critical infrastructure issues, and new directions for research. Raynard Kington, M.D., Ph.D., Acting Director, NIAAA and George Kunos, M.D., Ph.D., NIAAA Scientific Director participated in the "roadmap" meetings; Dr. Kington participated in the Leadership Forum.

The "roadmap initiative" is an ongoing process, and Dr. Zerhouni will be seeking further input from the research community as well as the public. You will be learning more about his exciting process in the coming months.


Trans-NIH Activities

The NIAAA is participating in a Program Announcement (PA) entitled, “Tools for Genetic Studies in Zebrafish” (PAR-02-142), which was issued on August 2 by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in collaboration with the Trans-NIH Zebrafish Coordinating Committee. This PA solicits applications for research designed to exploit the power of mutagenesis screening in zebrafish in order to detect and characterize genes, pathways, and phenotypes of interest in development and aging, organ formation, behavior, and disease processes. NIAAA will benefit from this initiative by funding studies that develop screening methods for alcohol-related phenotypes and that identify genes/biomarkers for susceptibility to teratogenesis, tissue injury, and alcohol sensitivity. Dr. Lisa A. Neuhold, Division of Basic Research, is the NIAAA liaison for the Trans-NIH Zebrafish Coordinating Committee, and participated in developing this Announcement. Dr. Neuhold can be contacted at 301-594-6228 or lneuhold@willco.niaaa.nih.gov.

  • Adolescent Trials Network:  The Adolescent Trials Network (ATN) is a national, multi-center research network funded by NIH through a cooperative agreement to conduct both independent and collaborative research. Its mission encompasses the full spectrum of research needs for youth between 12 and 25 years of age. Included in this mission are primary prevention activities, such as HIV-1 preventive vaccine trials (when available) for HIV at-risk youth in the community and clinical management of HIV-infected youth including novel regimens, drug adherence, and risk reduction. The ATN is comprised of a leadership group responsible for the definition and development of the research agenda, a data and operations center, and 15 clinical sites across the United States and Puerto Rico.

  • NIAAA has participated in supporting the Adolescent Trials Network since its inception in order to study the role of alcohol among HIV-infected youth. As a part of the ATN, NIAAA has issued a request for applications entitled "HIV Primary Prevention Interventions for Youth: An Invitation to Submit Research Proposals to the Adolescent Medicine Trials Network (ATN) for HIV/AIDS Interventions." The purpose of this announcement is to set up collaborations with established HIV and HIV-related behavioral-based prevention research investigators to study the role of mental health (depression, anxiety, PTSD), substance use and abuse (including alcohol), ADHD, and other conduct problems in HIV/STD prevention and treatment.
  • An NIH-wide group has been recently organized to plan a workshop on recruitment of hard-to-access populations into clinical research studies.” The workshop is planned as Spring/Summer 2003. Dr. Robert Freeman, Prevention Research Branch, Division of Clinical and Biological Research, is the NIAAA representative to this planning group.

  • An NIH-wide Task Force has been organized to plan a workshop on “Pathways Linking Educational Attainment to Health.” The goals of the Task Force are 1) To sponsor, with the Princeton Center for Health and Well Being, a conference on pathways linking education and health, and 2) to develop an initiative that encourages research on this topic. This workshop will be sponsored by the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research (OBSSR) in collaboration with interested NIH Institutes. Dr. Jan Howard and more recently, Dr. Robert Freeman, both in NIAAA's Prevention Research Branch, are involved in this planning effort.

NIH Public Liaison Activities

COPPR

Dr. Elias Zerhouni will host his first meting of the NIH Director’s Council of Public Representatives (COPR) October 21–22. For additional information about COPR please see https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20080916102427/http://getinvolved.nih.gov/.

NIAAA HIGHLIGHTS

Budget Update

Congressional Activity

The Senate has provided NIAAA $418.8 million in FY 2003, an increase of $2.0 million over the President’s request. The House is scheduled to mark up the request in mid-September. Below is a summary of the Senate’s allowance.

 

FY 2002 Appropriation

FY 2003

President’s Request

FY 2003

Senate Allowance

Extramural Research:

 

 

 

            Grants and Contracts

    $317,599

      $344,701

     $346,701

            Research Training (NRSA).

          9,547

           9,842

          9,842

Intramural Research

        37,455

         40,826

        40,826

Research Management and Support

        19,637

         21,404

        21,404

Total, NIAAA (including AIDS)                   

      384,238

        416,773

       418,773

Percent increase over prior year

 

            8.5%

           9.0%

AIDS (not added)                                       

      (23,950)

       (25,886)

      (25,886)

 

 

 

 

FTE’s

            262

              261

             261


NIH Director Visit to NIAAA

NIH Director Elias Zerhouni, M.D. visited NIAAA on August 12. He has met or will be meeting with each Institute and Center as a part of his "getting to know" NIH. NIAAA Senior Staff presented information in the following areas:  Overview of the Institute's Organization and Budget; Extent of Alcohol-related problems; Alcohol Epidemiological Research; Alcohol Basic Research; NIAAA Advanced Research Program; NIAAA Intramural Research; Collaborative Research Activities; and NIAAA Outreach activities.

College Drinking Initiative

College Drinking Web site

The college drinking web site, www.collegedrinkingprevention.gov, was launched in conjunction with the release of the Task Force Report on College Drinking. Target audiences for the site include college presidents, campus health administrators, media, parents, students, community leaders, resident advisors and peer educators. The site includes an interactive map with clickable links to over 750 college and university policies throughout the United States. There is also an online press kit, newsroom, research-based facts, useful tips, and numerous interactive tools such as a body that demonstrates how alcohol affects organ function, calorie and cost calculators, e-cards, and downloadable posters. An ordering section has recently been added, allowing visitors to order copies of the report and related materials via the Web.

Since its launch , the web site has had about 2.4 million hits. Visitors are particularly interested in the Task Force Report, student section, snapshot of alcohol facts, and the map of campus alcohol policies. The site has received recognition from the International Association of Business Communicators Silver Inkwell Awards, WWW Health Awards, National Collegiate Athletic Association, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Join Together, Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, PBS and others for a total of 13 awards and 3 acknowledgments. In addition, the web site is indexed in all major search engines and directories for any search on “college drinking” and has achieved the number one spot for the term on Yahoo!, Google, and MSN Search.

Regional Workshops

NIAAA is actively planning the first of a series of regional and state interactive workshops on campus drinking, structured around the Task Force Report. The first such workshop, which is scheduled for October 21-22, will be hosted by Dr. Susan Resneck Pierce, a member of the Task Force and President of the University of Puget Sound.  It will bring together the presidents and deans of student affairs of colleges and universities in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alaska (approximately 140). Clinicians, researchers, alcohol and other drug prevention coordinators, resident advisors and peer educators are also invited to participate. Prominent researchers in the field of college drinking will highlight research findings showing that the consequences of drinking in college are larger and more destructive than commonly realized. Workshop sessions will provide useful information about and insights into the effectiveness (and, as importantly, the need for more rigorous research and evaluation) of alcohol prevention interventions currently in use. The workshop will give participants the chance to ask questions and to share ideas and experiences with others. In addition, NIAAA is working with representatives from the Department of Education, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Department of Justice, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to incorporate a special federal resources panel on college drinking into the agenda.

Hispanic Alcohol Research and Career Development Hispanic/Latino Planning Meeting

The NIAAA Office of Collaborative Research convened the first NIAAA planning meeting to advance alcohol research with Hispanic/Latino populations and foster career development for Hispanic/Latino alcohol investigators. The meeting was held June 24 in Bethesda, Maryland. The outside consultants and participants included Marilyn Aguirre-Molina, Ed.D.,  Judith A. Arroyo, Ph.D., Raul Caetano, M.D., Ph.D., Linda L. Chezem, J.D., Frank Galvan, Ph.D., M.S.W., Andres G. Gil, Ph.D. M.S.W., Jeannette Noltenius, Ph.D., M.A., Amelie Ramirez, Ph.D., William A. Vega, Ph.D. Other NIH staff included: Teresa Chapa, Ph.D., M.P.A., NCMHD; Suzanne Heurtin-Roberts, Ph.D., M.S.W., NCI; and Clifton Poodry, Ph.D., NIGMS. NIAAA participants Raynard Kington, M.D., Ph.D., Mary C. Dufour, M.D., M.P.H., Faye Calhoun, D.P.A., M.S., Richard K. Fuller, M.D., M.S., and Samir Zakhari, Ph.D.

Recommendations developed during the meeting included: Create mechanisms for cross-fertilization with other disciplines and granting agencies; find ways to expedite predoctoral and postdoctoral support outside the framework of institutional training grants; develop efficient and effective ways to support mentors for minority investigators; hire more Hispanic and Latino scientists at NIAAA to promote research for Hispanic and Latino populations; and plan a major new NIAAA-wide conference on Health Disparities.

Leadership Initiative To Keep Children Alcohol Free

Airport Diorama

The Leadership unveiled its airport diorama in July. Two hundred dioramas designed to educate the public about the hazards of underage drinking have been placed in 36 major airports across the country, including Reagan-National, Dulles, Kennedy, La Guardia, BWI, Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Salt Lake City, St. Louis, Denver,  Tampa, and Anchorage. The dioramas feature a special poster with the statistic, “1 in 4 eighth graders has been drunk,” to draw attention to the reality of childhood drinking and to make a compelling case for putting the prevention of early alcohol use on the national agenda. More information about the dioramas may be found at www.alcoholfreechildren.org.

RWJ Press Conference

Dr. Michael J. McGinnis, Senior Vice President, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, will host and moderate a press conference on the “Hidden Costs of Underage Drinking,” a national poll funded by the Foundation in support of the Leadership initiative. The purpose of the poll was to get the perspective of policy makers and opinion leaders in education, public health, and law enforcement on the hidden costs of early alcohol use. Appearing at the press conference was First Lady of North Dakota Mikey Hoeven, First Lady of North Carolina Mary Easley, Mayor of Toledo, Ohio, Jack Ford, and Dr. J. Edward Hill, Chair, American Medical Association. The Press conference took place September 19 at the National Press Club in Washington, DC.

First Ladies' Activities

  • First Ladies continued their own efforts to raise public awareness about alcohol use by children.
  • North Dakota’s First Lady, Mikey Hoeven, launched the second phase of her campaign against underage drinking with a radio spot geared to kids. The first phase was a radio commercial aimed at parents, and the third phase will be a poster contest for kids. Twenty-five billboards with the message, “Let’s keep our kids alcohol free,” are displayed across the State.
  • In Oregon, First Lady Sharon Kitzhaber is working with the Oregon Department of Human Services and the Office for Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJDDP) on the “Wise Up!” campaign that offers straight talk about alcohol to parents and other adults.
  • Columba Bush, First Lady of Florida and Co-Chair of the Leadership initiative, is being featured on three billboards and three public service announcements addressing substance abuse and children throughout her State. Mrs. Bush, who is also an active member of Informed Families of Florida, is visiting youth substance abuse prevention programs throughout the State.

  • Tennessee’s First Lady Martha Sundquist recently joined former Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) president Millie Webb to tape a public service announcement regarding drinking and driving. The PSA will be used by the Governor’s Highway Safety Office in its campaign against drunk driving called “Booze It and Lose It,” that will be aired Statewide.
  • Ohio First Lady and Co-Chair of the Leadership initiative, Hope Taft, participated in the Webcast entitled, “Civic and Appointed Officials: Raising Their Voices for Recovery.” The SAMHSA Center for Substance Abuse Treatment sponsored the Webcast as one of several events leading up to September’s National Alcohol and Drug Addiction Recovery Month. Mrs. Taft highlighted the involvement of the Governors’ spouses and their efforts to raise awareness about early alcohol use. Mrs. Taft is also organizing the  “First Lady’s Summit to Keep Children Alcohol Free,” a one day conference to be held on September 26 in Columbus, Ohio. Dr. J. Edward Hill, Chair of the American Medical Association, will give the keynote address. Ohio members of the AMA Alliance, the organization of AMA spouses, have been invited to attend as part of an emerging new alliance between the Governors’ spouses and the AMA group. The two organizations are taking steps to join forces for the prevention of alcohol use by children. Mrs. Taft will address the national conference of the AMA Alliance in Chicago this October. She has also invited mayors, chiefs of police, and sheriffs to the Columbus meeting that will feature presentations by NIAAA-supported researchers Drs. Sandra Brown and Richard Scribner.

  • Mrs. Sherri Geringer, First Lady of Wyoming, will be the keynote speaker at the opening day lunch of a conference sponsored by The OJJDP Center for Enforcing Underage Drinking Laws. The conference entitled, “Leading Change for a National Priority,” will be held on September 20 in Dallas, Texas.
  • The Leadership’s publications and newly developed airport diorama were prominently displayed at the 94th Annual Meeting of the of the National Governors Association hosted by Idaho Governor Dirk Kempthorne and First Lady Patricia Kempthorne. The meeting was held in Boise, July 13-16.

  • In Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Eagles football team together with the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB) tackled underage drinking at a pre-season game against the Baltimore Ravens in Philadelphia. All fans received a full-color poster featuring Pro-Bowl kicker David Akers and reading, “Underage Drinking Will Kick Your Life Away.” Former First Lady of Pennsylvania Michele Ridge and the PLCB have been very strong supporters of the Leadership initiative, and since becoming First Lady, Kathy Schweiker has maintained her active involvement in this issue. Such sustained involvement makes a tremendous difference in broadening support for the initiative’s goals.

Leadership Initiative Web Site

The Leadership’s prevention message is being widely disseminated through both its web site at www.alcoholfreechildren.org and its publications. The web site received over one million hits in the third quarter. The initiative has developed eight print and video materials, three of which are available in English and Spanish, with a total of 497,405 materials distributed since January 2000. Requests for materials are growing at a rapid rate, with 203,306 materials requested in just the first half of 2002. Materials were also distributed in response to requests from 40 foreign countries.

NIAAA Web Site Highlights

The second phase of the usability study of the NIAAA web site has been completed. Results will be provided by the end of September. This second phase focused more on the scientist/researcher  than on the lay public.

A number of new items have been added to the web site including a new NIAAA AIDS/HIV web page.

OFFICE AND DIVISION ACTIVITIES

Office of the Director

Acting Director’s Activities

The following are selected activities undertaken by the Acting Director since the June Council meeting:

Dr. Kington participated in the planning of, gave opening remarks, and participated in the day-long Hispanic Alcohol Research and Career Development Planning Meeting.

Dr. Kington was invited to deliver a presentation to Science and Policy Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Kington discussed how science policy is conducted within the Federal Government.

On June, 29, Dr. Kington presented at the Official Opening of the joint RSA/ISBRA meeting on current and future initiatives and activities at the NIH and at the NIAAA. Also at the RSA/ISBRA meeting, Dr. Kington presented a talk entitled, "College Drinking Task Force Report and Associated Materials," at the Symposium on College Drinking, and participated in an RSA-sponsored workshop entitled, "De-mystifying the Legislative Process."

Dr. Kington, participated in the National Institutes of Health Rhode Island Public Health Forum on Women's Health sponsored by Representative Patrick Kennedy (D-RI), House Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, HHS, and Education. The forum was in cooperation with Brown University, Rhode Island Academic Medicine Coalition, and  Women and Infants Hospital. Dr. Kington addressed "Behavioral and Social Factors in Women's Health" during the opening plenary session, and co-chaired a breakout session on "Drinking Among College Women" with Dr. Peter Monti, Director, Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University. Dr. Monti presented on the topic "Problem Drinking Among College Women: A Local Perspective" at the breakout session.

Deputy Director’s Activities

Dr. Dufour represented NIAAA at the CDC-sponsored meeting of the Scientific Advisory Committee for the development of the Alcohol-Related Disease Impact (ARDI) software. The meeting was held September 4-5 at the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention in Decatur, Georgia. The original ARDI software, which was developed by NIAAA and distributed to the states by CDC, was designed to track alcohol-related deaths at the State level. The meeting in which Dr. Dufour participated is one in a continuing series of meetings to update the ARDI software and to develop a web site that among other things will allow states to calculate alcohol-related morbidity, mortality, and economic costs.

Dr. Dufour is representing NIAAA at the First National Conference on Birth Defects, Developmental Disabilities, and Disability and Health, September 17-19 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Conference, which is sponsored by the CDC, is addressing a broad range of interests supporting the mission and future direction of the newest CDC Center, The National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities.

Office of Collaborative Research

Office of the Director

Workshop for FAS Children

Dr. Faye Calhoun provided the opening address for the first summer workshop and meeting of children affected by prenatal alcohol exposure and their caregivers. The event was held in Grand Rapids, Michigan, August 15-17, and organized by Barbara Wybrecht and the Michigan FAS Family Support Group. The event was funded by the FAS Center for Excellence, CSAP, SAMHSA ; the WK Kellogg Foundation; and the Alcohol Research Center of Michigan. Affected children from many states and from Canada participated in the event. A Town Hall meeting conducted on the final day allowed state administrators as well as representatives from Federal agencies and advocacy groups to hear the issues and recommendations of families and affected young people.

Plenary Address

Dr. Calhoun provided a plenary address for the Oscar Parsons Summer Institute on Substance-Related Disorders. The Institute was held on July 15-17 and sponsored by the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center.

Collaborative and Special Health Programs Branch

HIV/AIDS and Alcohol Workshop

A satellite workshop was presented June 28 at the Annual RSA Meeting in collaboration with Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science. The workshop was organized by Steve R. Mitchell, Ph.D., Eric Bing, M.D., and Kendall Bryant, Ph.D. The presentations, which focused on the associations of alcohol use and abuse with HIV/AIDS, addressed  the effects of HIV and alcohol on the brain ("Neuropsychological, EEG, and MRI studies”); behavioral and social issues ("Entwining Epidemics:  Behavioral and Prevention Aspects of the Relationship between Alcohol and HIV/AIDS"), and clinical and epidemiological aspects (“Brief HIV and Alcohol Combined Interventions for Women”).

XIV International AIDS Meeting, July 7th

Dr. Bryant co-facilitated an Office on AIDS Research-sponsored Skills Building Workshop at the International AIDS Meeting in Barcelona Spain. The workshop was designed to facilitate international applications to AIDS programs supported through NIH. Based on comments received from the international participants, it was a successful session providing useful and important information on the preparation of an NIH grant application, the NIH peer review process, and IC specific AIDS research and training programs.

AIDS International Research Training Program Award

The AIDS International Research Training Program Award is intended to solicit and fund proposals to develop innovative, collaborative training programs that can contribute to the long-term goal of building sustainable research capacity in alcohol and HIV/AIDS and HIV-related conditions at developing country institutions. NIAAA, which is participating in this program in collaboration with the NIH Fogarty International Institute, is cofunding four Phase 1 applications from eligible institutions to train or expand the capabilities of developing country institutions to engage in HIV/AIDS and HIV-related research, with an emphasis on developing future applications with an alcohol research focus.

New Awards

Nine developmental grants were funded in response to RFA AA-02-008: Effects of alcohol on HIV-1 invasion across the blood brain barrier (BBB) or placental barrier. Several  topics include: The Effect of Alcohol on HIV-1 Immune Responses and BBB Damage; Functional Genomics of the BBB; Alcohol and SIV Neuroinvasion in vivo and in vitro; and Ethanol, transactivator protein-overexpression (Tat), and the BBB. A grantee meeting is planned during FY 2003 in order to facilitate collaborative research efforts.

Research Development and Health Disparities Branch

Health Disparities Research

New Awards:  Of the 31 applications received in response to the NIAAA-wide RFA for Alcohol Health Disparities (RFA AA02-002), seven grants are being awarded. These grants include three new R01s, three exploratory/developmental grants (R21s), and one educational grant (R25).

Application of Geospatial Information Systems Analysis to Health Disparities Issues: Branch Chief Tom Gentry and Diana Urbanas attended the pre-RSA satellite session on “Community Geography: Theory Methods and Analysis” held at the Prevention Research Center in Berkeley, CA. This all-day session provided the theoretical background and specific examples of the application of Geospatial Information Systems (GIS) analysis of neighborhood and census-tract data appropriate to the assessment of complex environment/population interactions. While the specific models and methodologies are still evolving, GIS analysis offers a potentially useful way to assess health disparities issues. The variety of factors that contribute to racial and ethnic differences in environmental risk factors, alcohol consumption, and alcohol-related outcomes are complex, interactive and temporally changing. GIS-type methodology assessment of these factors may produce more relevant information to address these issues than the more general models currently used.

Malt Liquor Research:  OCR has initiated plans for a second grantee meeting in March, 2003 (Washington, DC). A summary report of the FY 2002 meeting is available for review. During the 2002 meeting, grantees noted the emergence of aggressive marketing for malternatives and alco-pop products to young people through magazine and television advertisements. NIAAA is tracking the emergence of these new alcohol products and will explore the impact of advertising in this area and related research developments during the 2003 meeting.

NIAAA-wide Health Disparities Conference: The first NIAAA-wide Health Disparities Conference is being planned for FY 2003 with substantial co-funding from the National Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD). The target date for this Conference is September 2003. The focus will include research on strategies to eliminate alcohol-related health disparities, development of research infrastructure at Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), advancement of minority investigators in alcohol research, and information dissemination to minority and ethnic communities.

Collaborative Minority Institution Alcohol Research Development Programs: OCR is in the process of selecting a contractor to continue the evaluation of the current Collaborative Minority Institution Alcohol Research Development Programs (CMIARD) programs and to evaluate new CMIARD grantees. The evaluation will include recommendations for improving CMIARD core functions (e.g., collaborative partnership, administration function, research infrastructure, and information transfer) and the research development associated with these programs.  In addition, the contractor will evaluate the use of U24 and U01 cooperative agreement mechanisms to determine the impact on collaboration and research capacity for minority institutions and their faculty, students and staff. This evaluation guidance will help NIAAA to adjust activities and implement improvements in developing future CMIARD initiatives.

International and Health Education Programs Branch

Health Education Programs

National Alcohol Screening Day (NASD): The 2002 National Alcohol Screening Day (April 11) was a major success. This year’s event, which focused on increasing public awareness about the health consequences of at-risk drinking, had a total of 2850 registered sites including 1198 primary care sites (clinics and private practice physicians), 1042 community sites (public hospitals, community centers, senior centers, addiction treatment programs), 561 college sites, and 49 major corporations. Compared with previous years and particularly with 2001, site registration levels have grown from 906 to 2850 sites in just one year, far exceeding (by 67percent) the original three year NASD goal of 1700. Other milestones in the one-year period between 2001 and 2002 include: overall site registration increase from 906 to 2850 sites (214.6 percent); total national attendance increase from 31,949 to 95,715 individuals (199.6 percent); and an increase in the total number of individuals screened from 17,127 to 51,869 (202.9 percent).

In preparation for NASD 2003 and beyond, a project advisory group meeting was held in Washington, DC on June 13-14. Experts in alcohol screening and early intervention, state alcohol treatment directors, outreach specialists, site directors from select NASD sites, and representatives from media relations and co-sponsoring organizations, participated in the meeting to help develop new ideas and strategies for NASD 2003 (April 10, 2003). Important areas discussed during this meeting included: Recruitment and Retention of Sites; Site Implementation; Screening and Brief Interventions for Alcohol Problems in the Emergency Department; A Review of the Screening and Scoring of the AUDIT for Use on NASD; Promotional and Media events; and Message Development. Highlighted at the meeting were regional updates of special events in the states of Florida, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Illinois, New York, and Washington, DC.

8th World Congress on Infant Mental Health:  Isabel Ellis organized and served as discussant on a symposium entitled “Identification of Risk During Infancy Associated with Parental Alcohol Problems” at the 8th World Congress on Infant Mental Health, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, July 15-19. U.S. experts on the symposium panel included Dr. Sandra Jacobson, Wayne State University School of Medicine; Dr. Rina Das Eiden, University of Buffalo; and Dr. Claire Coles, Emory University School of Medicine. The purpose of the symposium was to discuss the established association and conflict between early identification of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) and prevention of secondary disabilities. Identifying alcohol exposure is not common in the first year of life, and controversy continues about whether children younger than preschool age can be identified by physical features.

Office of Policy and Public Liaison

Constituency Activities

 The following are recent and near future activities undertaken by OPPL in support of NIAAA Outreach Activities:

Alcohol Research To Practice Network - Collaborations with Outside Organizations

September 2002

American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT): NIAAA will release a guide on screening and brief interventions titled, Alcohol Problems in Intimate Relationships: Identification and Intervention; A Guide for Marriage and Family Therapists. This publication is the result of a partnership to help therapists incorporate screenings and brief interventions into their couples and family practices. Kelly Green Kahn is working with Bill Northey of AAMFT, and alcohol researchers Linda J. Roberts, Ph.D and Barbara S. McCrady, Ph.D. to incorporate relevant information into the clinical practices and decisions of marriage and family therapists. This guide will complement the Institute’s update of its manual on screenings and brief interventions for physicians and other health professionals.

October 2002

Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD):  NIAAA and MADD will cosponsor, for the fourth year, a research symposium designed to educate constituents on particular areas of alcohol research. The symposium will be held on October 17. in Anchorage, Alaska. This year the symposium will focus on college drinking in support of NIAAA's college drinking initiative. Over 1400 college students die alcohol-involved deaths every year; approximately 1100 of those deaths are automobile crash results. Presenters will review NIAAA's College Task Force report, discuss recommendations for prevention interventions, and suggest how community members can support the results of research in practical, real world settings.

New York Conference on Addictions and Special Populations:  NIAAA will cosponsor the Treating Addictions in Special Populations: Research Confronts Reality conference on October 7-8.. Kelly Green Kahn has worked with the conference coordinators at Binghamton University who organized this event in collaboration with a statewide planning committee. This conference will involve gathering a multi-disciplinary audience of researchers, educators, policymakers, practitioners, service providers, and students to enhance research to practice efforts, and to encourage teamwork and collaboration at all levels of addiction management with a special focus on the research and treatment needs of special populations. Charlene LeFauve, Ph.D. Treatment Research Branch, DCPR, will provide remarks during the conference and will present a workshop on treatment-related health disparities in special populations, including knowledge gaps. Joan Romaine and Fred Donodeo (OPPL) will present two poster sessions that focus on the NIAAA Task Force on College Drinking and its award-winning web site.

Researcher-in-Residence

New York Collaboration, Phase II:  NIAAA completed its work with the New York State Office of Substance Abuse Services, the Association of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Providers of New York (ASAPNY), and the SAMHSA Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) on phase II of this project - the Researcher in Residence Program. The report is available on the NIAAA Web site at www.niaaa.nih.gov/.

NIAAA and CSAT are continuing to work with New York on research-to-practice projects. NIAAA will supplement the CSAT Practice Improvement Collaboratives Program to further assist researchers and practitioners in their joint efforts. NIAAA also continues its support for the ASAPNY annual conference.

North Carolina Collaboration, Phase II:  NIAAA completed its work with the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Substance Abuse Services, North Carolina treatment providers, and CSAT on Phase II – the Researcher in Residence Program. The report will be available on the NIAAA web site in the near future.

Office of Scientific Affairs

Extramural Project Review Branch

RFA/RFP Review

For this review round, Extramural Project Review Branch Staff completed 35 review meetings to evaluate a total of 240 grant applications, and 4 review meetings to evaluate a total of 13 contract proposals. Reviews completed include the following:

RFA:
 
No. Reviewed
AA00-003
Alcohol Research Centers
13
 
AA02-004
New approaches to developing pharmacotherapy for alcoholism
34
 
AA02-005
Medications to clinically treat alcohol dependence and alcohol-related diseases
11
 
AA02-006
Nonhuman primate models of neurobiological mechanisms of adolescent alcohol abuse
9
 
AA02-007
Mutant mouse phenotyping: ethanol-related behavior and nervous system function
3
 
AA02-009
Integrative Neuroscience Initiative on Alcoholism (INIA)
26
 
AA02-010
Stem cells in alcohol research
24
 
AA02-011
Role of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAMe) in the treatment of alcoholic liver disease
31
 
AA02-012
SBIR initiative on alcohol sensing and data analysis system
6
 
AA02-013
Exploratory/developmental grants for minority institutions alcohol research planning
4
RFP:
 
 
AA02-02
Role of cannabinoid receptors in alcohol tolerance
1
 
PHS 2002-1
SBIR Phase I contract solicitation
2
 
BAA
Alcohol sensor
10

The remaining 79 grant applications were not submitted in response to any special initiatives and therefore were reviewed in the Institute's standing review sub-committees, or special emphasis panels.

Review committees with the NIH Center for Scientific Review (CSR) evaluated 126 research grant applications over the course of this review round.

Scientific Communications Branch

Alcohol Research & Health

Since the last meeting of the National Advisory Council, "Preventing Alcohol-Related Problems" has been printed and disseminated; "Alcohol and Comorbid Mental Health Disorders" has been sent to the printers; and work continues on issues focusing on women, epidemiology, and genetics. The full  text of all AR&H issues dating back to 1996 is available on NIAAA's web site and can be accessed at /niaaa.nih.gov/.

Alcohol Research & Health, NIAAA's quarterly, peer-reviewed journal, is available from the Government Printing Office at a subscription rate of $20 per year. Further information on subscribing may be obtained by contacting the Scientific Communications Branch at 301/443-3860.

Alcohol Alert

"Alcohol and HIV/AIDS," has been printed. The October issue will summarize the report, A Call to Action: Changing the Culture of Drinking at U.S. Colleges.

The quarterly bulletin is available free of charge. For information on obtaining copies of this and other NIAAA publications, contact the Scientific Communications Branch at 301/443-3860. Full text of all Alerts are available on NIAAA’s web site at www.niaaa.nih.gov/.

Other Materials

Helping Patients with Alcohol Problems (the updated version of The Physicians Guide to Helping Patients): The first of two evaluation stages for the revised Guide has been completed, with in-depth reviews by five health practitioners (two physicians, one physician's assistant, and one nurse practitioner). All of the practitioners said the Guide would be helpful to them, some noting that they appreciated the reminder to use the CAGE when indicated. The reviewers offered a number of comments that will help NIAAA refine the design and content. After the revisions from this round are made, the Guide will be evaluated by four additional health care practitioners before being finalized.

Nearly 100,000 copies of the poster targeting "tweens," (ages 11-13) developed by NIAAA in partnership with the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, have been disseminated. A large number of the Safe and Drug Free School Programs have requested copies for middle schools in their States.

Two NIAAA booklets,  Make a Difference: Talk to Your Child About Alcohol, and Alcohol: What You Don't Know Can Harm You, have been updated. Printed copies will be available in October.

Research Monograph #37, Alcohol Use Among American Indians and Alaska Natives:   Multiple Perspectives on a Complex Problem, has been submitted to the printers.

The publication, Alcohol Consumption and Problems in the General Population: Findings From the 1992 National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiology Survey, has been sent to the printers. This publication contains more than 40 journal articles based on data from the 1992 National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiologic Survey of the US adult population.

NIAAA prepared an article on underage drinking that will appear in the back-to-school issue of the Department of Education's newsletter, The Challenge.

Public Service Announcements (PSAs)

Several designs and story boards for television PSAs were developed and approved by NIAAA. The selected designs were turned into "animatics" and were pretested in focus groups in Chicago, IL and Baltimore, MD. Feedback was positive and we are proceeding with casting and shooting the PSA.

FAS Public Awareness Campaign

Work has begun on developing a television public service announcement to be released next year. For the coming year, a number of community events are scheduled, including health fairs. Other promotional activities include cinema advertising, continuing use of the free MetroRail subway and Metro Bus advertising space, and planned placing of interior placards in 500 MetroBuses.

Division of Basic Research

Workshops

 “Neurobiology of Alcohol and Aging”

Dr. Dennis Twombly organized a workshop on the “Neurobiology of Alcohol and Aging." held September 10 - 11in Bethesda, Maryland. Aging is known to be associated with a variety of changes that place older individuals at special risk for alcohol-related health problems. However, the relationship between aging and alcohol action has remained largely unexplored in terms of basic neurobiology. This workshop, co-sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, convened leading experts in aging research and alcohol research, with the goal of identifying molecular, cellular, and behavioral mechanisms that govern alcohol responses in the aging brain.

“Presynaptic Substrates of Alcohol Action”

Dr. Twombly organized a workshop entitled, “Presynaptic Substrates of Alcohol Action, to be held September 24 in Bethesda, Maryland. The presynaptic terminal is the source of the “message” at every cell-cell junction, yet most alcohol research has thus far focused on postsynaptic targets such as ion channels, receptor-channel complexes, and neurochemical pathways. Recent advances in presynaptic neurobiology have unveiled a broad spectrum of potential targets for alcohol. This workshop will convene leading experts on presynaptic physiology and chemistry and investigators who have conducted studies on synaptic mechanisms in relation to alcohol. Identifying alcohol-induced changes in these mechanisms will be critical for understanding how alcohol impacts neuronal excitability and communication.  


Staff Activities

  •  Joint RSA/ISBRA Meeting Participation (June 28-July 3)

Dr. Laurie Foudin organized and presented the introduction to a Satellite Symposium, “Experimental Therapeutics for Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.” The workshop featured six speakers who discussed mechanistic approaches to preventing ethanol’s effects on neuronal cell death.

In the symposium on Alcohol and Liver: A Memorial for Dr. Ronald Thurman, Dr. Vishnu Purohit highlighted significant discoveries made by Dr. Thurman and his research collaborators in the area of alcoholic liver disease.

Dr. Ellen Witt and Dr. Linda Spear, Department of Psychology, SUNY Binghamton, co-organized a Satellite Symposium entitled “Neurobiological Mechanisms of Adolescent Alcohol Abuse:  New Findings, New Directions.”

Dr. Dennis Twombly presented a talk entitled, “The Objectives of Science Education:  Educating The Public, Educating The Scientists, or Educating The Administration?” at the workshop  entitled, "Science Education and Community Outreach." The workshop dealt with issues involved in presenting alcohol research to the lay public and school-age children, including how exhibits and exhibitions can be organized, how to create multi-institutional partnerships, and what factors encourage or discourage scientists from becoming involved in outreach activities. In addition to describing some of NIAAA’s latest outreach initiatives, Dr. Twombly showed video clips from his “Drunken Brain” exhibit. He also reviewed some of the under-appreciated benefits of public outreach projects, such as networking among scientists, recruiting of students into scientific disciplines, and forging new relationships with other institutions.

Division Director, Dr. Samir Zakhari  co-organized and co-chaired a symposium entitled "Neuronal Stem Cells and Alcohol."

  • Dr. Zakhari was invited to the 6th International Symposium on Global Risk of Coronary Heart Disease And Stroke: Assessment, Prevention, and Treatment" held in Florence, Italy on June 12-15. He co-chaired a plenary symposium on "Lifestyle, Diet and Coronary Heart Disease," and gave a presentation on "Moderate Alcohol Consumption and Coronary Artery Disease."
  • Dr. Witt and Dr. Peter Finn, Department of Psychology, Indiana University, co-organized a symposium entitled “Impulsivity, Disinhibition and Alcohol Use and Abuse: Cognitive, Motivational and Neurophysiological Processes,” which was held June 7 at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychological Society, New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • Dr. Mark Egli and Dr. Bartley G. Hoebel, Princeton University, organized a symposium entitled “Peptides: Their role in excess alcohol drinking and their promise as a therapeutic tool” presented at the 10th annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behaviors in Santa Cruz, California, August 10. The symposium featured NIAAA-supported research on the influence of regulatory ingestive peptides on alcohol consumption.

Publications

Purohit V, Russo D: Role of s-adenosyl methionine in the treatment of alcoholic liver disease: introduction and summary of the symposium. Alcohol 27:151-154, 2002

Symposium on Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Alcoholic Hepatitis, 24th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, June 2001, Alcohol 27 (1): 1-72, 2002 (Organized by Dr. Vishnu Purohit).

Symposium on Role of S-Adenosyl-L-Methionine (SAMe) in the Treatment of Alcoholic Liver Disease, Bethesda, Maryland, USA, September 2001, Alcohol 27 (3): 149-198, 2002 (Organized by Dr. Vishnu Purohit).

Division of Biometry and Epidemiology

Staff Activities

  • Joint RSA/ISBRA Meeting Participation (June 28-July 3)

Dr. Vivian B. Faden was a discussant at an RSA symposium entitled “New Opportunities in College Drinking Research: Results and Recommendations from the NIAAA Task Force on College Drinking.”

Dr. Faden together with Dr. Gayle Boyd (DCPR), presented a poster at RSA entitled “Research Opportunities at NIAAA on Drinking Among College Students.”

DBE staff in collaboration with Alcohol Epidemiologic Data System (AEDS) staff presented two posters: “Average Daily Alcohol Consumption, Episodic Heavy Drinking, and Liver Diseases” by Hsiao-ye Yi and Mary C. Dufour; and “Accidental Alcohol Poisoning Mortality in the United States, 1996-1998,” by Young-Hee Yoon, Hsiao-ye Yi, and Mary C. Dufour. The latter poster received considerable press coverage based on the conference presentation.

  • Dr. Page Chiapella participated in a "Consensus Conference on Suicide", held in Washington, D.C. on June 12 and 13. This conference was the second in a series of five annual conferences plus several supporting workshops organized by the University of Rochester Center on Suicide Prevention. The project is funded by a grant from the NIMH with co-funding from NIAAA and other government agencies. Included among the 2002 workshops was “Alcohol and Suicidal Behavior,” held on the NIH Campus March 21-22. Drs. Chiapella and Ken Conner (University of Rochester) were co-organizers of that workshop. A supplement to Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research containing papers based on presentations at the workshop is in preparation.
  • Dr. Faden was a guest lecturer at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland on August 14. Dr. Faden spoke to MPH students on the “Epidemiology of Alcohol-related Problems.”

Publication

Drs. Barbara A. Smothers and Harold T. Yahr, together with Dr. Michael D. Sinclair from Mathematica Policy Research, Princeton, New Jersey, have had a paper accepted for publication in the Archives of Internal Medicine. The paper is entitled “Prevalence of Current DSM-IV Alcohol Abuse and Dependence in Short-Stay General Hospital Admissions, United States, 1994.”

Division of Clinical and Prevention Research

 Office of the Director

Dr. Richard Fuller represented NIAAA at the American Psychiatric Association's Council on Addiction Psychiatry on September 13 in Washington, D.C. In this meeting, Dr. Fuller described a number of Institute initiatives and answered questions about NIAAA programs.

Treatment Research Branch

Project COMBINE-Update

The goal of this Cooperative Agreement is to identify optimal combinations of pharmacologic and behavioral interventions for the treatment of alcoholism. (See the NIH Press Advisory at /niaaa.nih.gov/NewsEvents/NewsReleases/COMBINE3-01.htm for a detailed description of Project COMBINE). Following two safety and feasibility pilot studies, the main trial began enrolling patients in January 2001. Recruitment has been steady, and as of September 1, 893 patients have been enrolled. Of these, 31percent are females and 22 percent are minorities. Two ancillary studies are underway: one, a study of cost effectiveness, and another on pharmacogenetics of alcoholism. The next meeting of the Steering Committee in scheduled for September 18-19 in Rockville. The Data Safety Monitoring Board for COMBINE will meet on November 6.

Workshop on Treatment Research Priorities and Health Disparities

The Treatment Research Branch will convene a "Workshop on Alcoholism Treatment Research Priorities and Health Disparities," September 23-24 at the Pooks Hill Marriott in Bethesda, Maryland. The primary goal of this workshop is to initiate the Treatment Research Branch’s program of research to reduce health disparities in the quality and outcomes of treatment for alcohol abuse and dependence among minority groups. The workshop has three objectives: 1) determine what we know about treatment-related health disparities in these groups and identify knowledge gaps; 2) evaluate the potential role of economic, social, and cultural variables in explaining the responses groups manifest in various phases of the treatment process; and 3) identify future research needs in developing and implementing effective treatment interventions. Participants will include experts in cultural competence in the mental health and addiction fields, along with scientists who have worked in the alcohol abuse and alcoholism treatment arena. There will be expertise in epidemiology, treatment assessment, specific treatment models, and special populations. Workshop co-chairs are Charlene E. Le Fauve, Ph.D., and Cherry Lowman, Ph.D.

Publications

Prevention Research Branch

Two CSAP-Honored Prevention Programs Based on NIAAA-funded research

On June 7, SAMHSA and its Center for Substance Abuse Prevention honored model evidence-based alcohol and drug abuse prevention programs at a press conference held at the National Press Club, Washington, D.C. The exemplary programs honored for the year 2001 had met CSAP criteria for effectiveness based on state-of-the-art scientific evaluations. Recipients of these awards are selected and announced annually by SAMHSA in collaboration with the National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors and the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America. At least two of the honored programs this year were based on research supported by NIAAA:  the Border Binge-Drinking Project (Dr. Robert Voas, P.I.) and BASICS (Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention for College Students), where the original research was conducted by Drs. Alan Marlatt, John Baer, and Mary Larimer.

Presentations

 Joint RSA/ISBRA Meeting Participation (June 28-July 3)

Dr. Kathy Salaita presented a paper on NIAAA alcohol safety research at the roundtable session on Alcohol Related Motor Vehicle Crashes.

Dr. Gayle Boyd was a discussant for the symposium, “New Opportunities in College Drinking Research: Results and Recommendations from the NIAAA Task Force on College Drinking.”

  • Dr. Boyd led a NIAAA Grantee Work Group, “Prevention of Alcohol Problems Among College Students:  Research Methodology,” held in San Francisco prior to the RSA annual meeting. It is anticipated that this group will continue to collaborate in the production of one or more publications on college research methodology.
  • Dr. Boyd presented a workshop on “Grant Application and Review at NIH and Funding Opportunities at NIAAA” at a research conference of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists, July 18-21, Reno, Nevada.
  • On August 14 Dr. Jan Howard delivered an invited lecture on Alcohol-Related Prevention Research to a class of graduate students in Public Health at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland.
  • On August 17 Dr. Robert Freeman presented a poster describing NIAAA/DCPR funding opportunities at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, Illinois.
  • On August 22 Dr. Boyd was the discussant for a symposium, “Adolescent Development and Alcohol Use,” at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Chicago, Illinois.

Staff Activities

  • On August 2,  Dr. Howard participated in a meeting of the Federal Interagency Working Group for Community-based Participatory Research CBPR), held in Washington, D.C. Participants included representatives from a wide range of federal agencies such as NIH, CDC, EPA, the Office of Minority Health, HUD, and Academy for Health Services Research and Health Policy AHRQ. Considerable time was devoted to a discussion of a proposed definition of CBPR, tentatively defined as, “scientific inquiry conducted in communities in which community members, persons affected by the condition or issue under study, and other key stakeholders in the community’s health have the opportunity to be full partners in each phase of the work, from conception, to design, to conduct, to analysis, to interpretation, to conclusions, to communication of results.” CDC gave an update on their RFA on CBPR which is eliciting a very large number (in the hundreds) of applications.
  • On June 19 Dr. Howard presented a summary of NIAAA-supported prevention research to a large delegation of visitors from Russia. Members of the delegation were interested in national and community policies as well as interventions focused on individuals that have the potential to prevent or reduce alcohol-related problems.
  • On July 1 Drs. Salaita and Howard participated in a working group meeting of PRB-supported grantees who are studying the effects of alcohol advertising on alcohol expectancies and drinking behavior. The research teams from four current studies attended the meeting and reported on their findings to date.

Health Services Research Branch

HSRB Initiatives

On August 9, the Health Services Research Branch (HSRB) issued the Program Announcement,  “Services and Intervention Research with Homeless Persons Having Alcohol, Drug Abuse, or Mental Disorders” (PA-01-150). Co-sponsored in collaboration with the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the announcement invites applications for health services research projects designed to increase understanding of services provided to homeless persons with alcohol, drug, or mental disorders. The announcement encourages research to examine the effect of organization and delivery factors on outcomes of care.

Researcher-in-Residence Program

The Researcher-in-Residence program has been completed in North Carolina. Site visits to all four participating treatment clinics were made between September 2001 and January 2002. These clinics are attempting to adopt research based improvements in clinical practice based on the stimulus of a brief, technical-assistance visit by a leading researcher. Two of the participating clinics are attempting to adopt the use of naltrexone in treatment practice and two are attempting to adopt the techniques of motivational interviewing to enhance client engagement. This program is jointly sponsored by CSAT and is one of a number of research-to-practice efforts undertaken by federal agencies concerned with alcohol and drug abuse treatment. NIAAA and CSAT staff met on June 13 in Raleigh, North Carolina, with staff from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Substance Abuse Services Section to wrap up the program and review and approve the final evaluation report. The report is entitled, “National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Researcher in Residence Program: Improving Treatment Practice in North Carolina.”

Newsletter

 In June 2002, HSRB published FrontLines, its semi-annual newsletter produced in collaboration with the Academy for Health Services Research and Health Policy, on the topic of alcohol use and misuse among older adults.

Presentations/Symposiums

Joint RSA/ISBRA Meeting Participation (June 28-July 3)

  Dr. Hilton organized a symposium, "Services Integration and Cost Effectiveness." and gave the introductory presentation.

Dr. Perl organized and led a full-day “Research-to-Practice” workshop entitled “Treating Your Clients’ Alcohol Problems: Lessons from the Latest Research,” as a pre-conference satellite program. Seven NIAAA-supported scientists presented current scientific knowledge on alcohol abuse and alcoholism in a format that focused on practical applications to treat clients with alcohol problems. The presiding judge of the Alameda County (California) drug court was the luncheon speaker.

Drs. Perl, Hilton, and Katherine Harris gave a presentation titled “NIAAA Research Funding Update” at the annual research meeting of the Academy for Health Services Research and Health Policy (AHRHQ), Washington, District of Columbia on June 23.

Dr. Perl organized, chaired and spoke at a symposium entitled, “Addressing Alcohol Problems Across Medical, Social Service and Criminal Justice Systems: Impact on Outcomes and Costs” at the AHRHQ annual research meeting.

Drs. Perl, Hilton, and Geoff Laredo, Director OPLPL, were featured speakers at a Science to Services Technical Assistance Workshop convened for the Program Officer staff of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, and the Center for Mental Health Services (SAMHSA) on July 30 in Rockville, Maryland.

Dr. Perl served as discussant at a symposium entitled “Building Better Collaborative Relationships Between Professional- and Mutual-Help Groups” at the 110th annual convention of the American Psychological Association (APA) on August 24 in Chicago, Illinois.

Dr. Perl organized and presented a 4-hour technical assistance workshop entitled “Inside the Black Box at NIH & NIAAA: Grant Writing Tips They Didn't Teach You in Grad School” at the APA Convention, August 21.

Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research

DICBR-Sponsored Seminars

05/29/02

Dr. David Sibley (NINDS/MNP) presented a seminar, "Molecular Neurobiology and Regulation of Dopamine Receptors."

06/07/02

Michael Smith (NCI) presented a seminar, "Candidate Genomics for HIV-1/AIDS Host Genetics and Beyond."

06/14/02

Kornel Schuebel, PhD (Johns Hopkins) presented a seminar, “The Epigenesis of Colorectal Cancer.”

06/17/02

Dr. Ann Rittenhouse (University of Massachusetts Medical School) presented a seminar, "Neurotransmitters Use Arachidonic Acid to Both Inhibit and Enhance N-Type Ca2+ Current."

06/17/02

Ji-Sheng Han, MD (Peking University) presented a seminar, “Acupuncture:  From Pain Control to the Treatment of Opiate Addiction."

06/21/02

Jaakko Lappalainen, MD/PhD (Yale University) presented a seminar, “Linkage Disequilibrium Mapping of Susceptibility Genes for Alcoholism.”

07/22/02

Anibal Cravchik, MD/PhD (Celera) presented a seminar, “Sequence Analysis of the Drosophila and Human Genomes: Implications for the Understanding of Nervous System Function and Disease.”

07/23/02

Dr. Melloni N. Cook (Genomics Institute, Wadsworth Center, Albany, NY) presented a seminar, "Back to Basics: Genetic Influences on Mouse Behavior"

07/26/02

Joel Gelertner, MD (Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University) presented a seminar, “Extended Pedigree Linkage Studies of Anxiety Disorders – A simple Phobia Risk Locus."

08/15/02

Xin-Min Li (University Of Minnesota, Hormel Institute) presented a seminar, "Sphingolipids: Physical Behavior, Interaction with Cholesterol and Glycolipid Transfer Protein."

08/15/02

Dr. Kari Buck (VA Medical Center, Portland, Oregon) presented a seminar, "Recent Studies of Alcohol Withdrawal Using Novel Genetic Mouse Models."

08/20/02

Dr. Andrew Holmes (NIMH/NIH) presented a seminar, "From Abnormal Behavioral Phenotypes to Genetic Models of Neuropsychiatric Disorders in Serotonin Transporter Null Mutant Mice."

09/04/02

Beat Lutz, PhD (Max-Planck-Institute of Psychiatry) presented a seminar, “The Function of the Endogenous Cannabinoid System in Memory Processing.”

09/12/02

Kazuo Nakazawa, PhD (RIKEN-MIT Neuroscience Research Center) presented a seminar, “The Roles of Hippocampal CA3 NMDA Receptors in Learning and Memory.”

Collaborations

06/11-16

Joseph Hibbeln (LMBB) met with Prof Jean Golding, University of Bristol, regarding collaboration for prospective collection of psychiatric data in ALSPAC and with Dr. Deiter Wolke regarding proposal to study eff of Omega-3 in red bullying.

06/12-14

Timothy Newman (LCS/NN) met with Dr. Melissa Gerald & colleagues at the Caribbean Primate Research Center to discuss collaborative project.

San Juan PR

07/-13-08/28

Lumir Hanus (School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine, Hebrew University, Israel) visited LPS to continue research collaboration.

08/1-2

Christina Barr & James Higley (LCS/NN) met with collaborators at the University of Michigan Medical Center to discuss planned and logistics of gene array experiments. Detroit MI.

08/12-13

David Lovinger (LIN) met with Drs. Danny Winder and Ariel Deutch of Vanderbilt University regarding collaborative research.

Nashville TN

08/27-09/5

Ephraim Yavin (LMBB) visited the Weizmann Institute to pursue collaborative work on gene expression profiles in N3 deficient and DHA-enriched diets in the developing brain. Rehovot, Israel.

DICBR Summer Research Program Intern Presentations at the NIH Poster Day, "Research At The Frontier," August 2002

  • Joseph S. Baick (Johns Hopkins University) presented a poster “Membrane Modification by Ethanol and Its Influence on Neuronal Survival.”  Preceptor:  Hee Yong Kim (LMBB/MS)
  • Elizabeth Conradt (University of North Carolina) & Jeff Sparenborg (Brigham Young University) presented a poster “Biological and Behavioral Determinants of Rhesus Macaque Dominance and Aggression.”  Preceptor:  James D. Higley (LCS/NN); Steven J Suomi (NICHD)
  • Samrita A. Dungel (Johns Hopkins University) presented a poster “NMR Studies of the Interaction of Sepia Rhodopsin with Lipid Matrix.”  Preceptor:  Klaus Gawrisch (LMBB/NMR)
  • Brian E. Hoffman (Gaithersburg High School) presented a poster “Applications of HPLC in Determining the Levels of Endocannabinoids.”  Preceptor:  Judy Harvey-White (LPS/NE)
  • Shalini V. Kulkarni (Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University) presented a poster “Lipid Peroxidation after Hepatectomy.”  Preceptor:  Bin Gao (LPS/LB)

LCS/NN Staff Participation at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Primatologists, Oklahoma City OK, 06/1-5, 2002

  • Michelle Becker presented a poster “The Relationship Between Destress Localization & Cortisol Response During Stress are Modulated...”
  • Rachel Dvoskin presented a poster "Salivary Prolactin Following Fenfluramine Stimulation in the Rhesus Macaque (Macaca Mulatta).”
  • Tami Gura presented a poster "Short-Term Cortcotropin-Releasing Hormone Receptor-1 Antagonist, Antalarmin Treatment Down Regulates 5-HT2a Sites with PET in Rhesus Macque Brain."
  • Stephen Lindell (LCS/NN) presented a poster "Salivary Prolactin Following Fenfluramine in the Rhesus Macaque (Macaca Mulatta).”
  • Timothy Newman presented the posters "Assessing the Influence of HVA Levels on Male Reproductive Output in Captive Rhesus Macaques (Macaca Mulatta)” and "Decreased Serotonin Turnover and Social Play During Infancy are Predictors of Aggression in Juvenile Rhesus Macaques.

DICBR Participation at the 25th Annual RSA/ISBRA Meeting

  • Christina Barr (LCS/NN) presented a poster "LHPA Axis Activity is Altered During Acute Administration of Ethanol..."
  • Skadi Beblo (LMBB) presented a poster "Influence of Alcohol Intake on the Fatty Acid Composition of Umbilical Cord Vessel Walls in African-American Women."
  • Philip Brooks (LNG) presented a poster "Interactions of Acetaldehyde with DNA in Presence of Spermine."
  • Paolo DePetrillo (LCS) presented a poster "Validation of a Binary-Scored Instrument for Assessment...”
  • Mary Anne Enoch (LNG) Chaired and presented a lecture at the Symposium, “Genetics of Alcohol Using Intermed Phenotypes.”
  • David Goldman (LNG) presented a lecture “From Gene to Complex Behavior and Back...COMT/Exec Cognitive Function."
  • Claudia Harris & Mary Anne Enoch (LNG) presented a poster "Association Between Low Amplitude P300 ERP/COMT Functional Polymorphism VAL158MET in Women."
  • James Higley (LCS/NN) presented a lecture "Adolescent Alcohol Abuse:  A Nonhuman Primate Model of Risk Factors...."
  • Daniel Hommer (LCS) presented a poster "Brain Growth and Shrinkage in Alcoholism.”
  • Xiang-Qun Hu (LMCN) presented a poster "5HT3A Receptor-Mediated Current by Ethanol: A Kinetic Analysis."
  • Hee-Yong Kim (LMBB) presented a lecture "Effect of Prenatal Ethanol Exposure on Phosphatidyl Contents & Apoptotic Cell Death in Fetal Hipocampus."
  • Robert Lipsky (LNG) presented a poster "Detection of COMT Differential Allele Expression by Quant 5' Nuclease Assay.”
  • David Lovinger (LIN) presented a poster “Ethanol Enhances Desensitization…”
  • Drake Mitchell (LMBB) presented a poster "Ethanol Enhances the Kinetics of Receptor-G Binding."
  • Timothy Newman (LCS/NN) presented a poster "Rearing Condition and Variation in CSF Homovanillic Acid (HVA) Influence Ethanol Consumption in Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca Mulatta).”
  • Hong Ren (LMCN) presented a poster "Role of a Site in M4 Regulating Ion Channel Gating in Alcohol Inhibition of NMDA Receptors."
  • Hui Sun & Li Zhang (LMCN) presented a poster "Different Mechanisms Underlie Direct Activation of 5-HT3a Receptor by Ethanol & Ethanol Potentiation of 5-HT3a Receptor Function.”
  • Elena Werby & Li Zhang (LMCN) presented a poster "Differential Sensitivity to Ethanol in the Absence of Agonist of Beta1 and Beta3 Subunit Containing GABA(A) Receptors."
  • Ke Xu (LNG) presented the posters “Linkage Disequilibrium/Haplotypes of 10 Loci...” and “Heroin Dependence in Two Populations.”
  • Guan-Shan Zhu (LNG) presented a poster "Detection of COMT Differential Allele Expression by Quantitative 5' Nuclease Assay off Transcribed SNP.”
  • DICBR Staff Participation at the 14th World Congress Of Pharmacology,
  • San Francisco CA
  • Jie Liu (LPS) presented a poster "Role of NFXB and P44/42 Pathways... Macrophages."
  • Lei Wang (LPS) presented a poster "Endocannabinoid and CB1 Receptor...in Mice."
  • Keming Xiong (LMCN) presented a poster "Mutation Of Histidine 241 Of The Rat P2X4 Receptor Alters The Mechanism by which Ethanol Inhibits Receptor Function."

Other Meetings/Invited Lectures

  • Philip Brooks (LNG) presented a invited seminar "DNA Damage, DNA Repair & Neurodegeneration: a Role for Endogenous DNA Lesions" at the Merck Research Lab, Philadelphia PA, 06/21.
  • David Goldman (LNG) invited presentation “From Behavior to Gene/Back:  COMT...." Dietrich Meeting, Denver CO, 06/25-27
  • Klaus Gawrisch (LMBB) presented a talk "The Properties of Lipids with polyunsaturated Hydrocarbon Chains" at the 34th Central/Great Lakes Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society, Ypsilanti, MI, 06/26-29.
  • George Kunos (LPS) attended Science Policy & Science Training Conference, Hungarian Academy of Science, Budapest, Hungary, 06/ 27-28.
  • George Kunos (LPS) presented a seminar, at 4th International Conference on Pathology (ISP2002), Budapest, Hungary, 06/29 - 07/5
  • George Kunos (LPS) presented a lecture "Endocannabinoids and Appetite... Systems" at the International Narcotic Research Conference, Pacific Grove CA  07/9-14.
  • David Lovinger (LIN) presented a lecture “Striatal Synaptic Plasticity: Where Dope Meets Dopamine” at the Dopamine 2002 meeting, Portland OR, 07/10-14.
  • George Kunos (LPS) participated in symposium on "Future Directions In Cannabinoid Therapeutics” at the University of California, San Diego CA, 07/15-16.
  • Ricardo Aragon II (LNG) presented a poster “Characterization of Genetic Variation In Nicotinic Ace Tylcholine Receptors: Distribution/Role in Nicotine Addiction/Alcoholism” at the Human Gene Variation Conference, Seattle WA. 
  • Michelle Becker (LCS/NN) presented a three papers at the International Primatological Society (IPS) Meeting and participated in post-Congress Site Visit of monkeys in wild. Beijing, China, 08/1-18.
  • David Goldman (LNG) presented a two lectures "Research Design: Human Methods" and "Human Behavior:  Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism" at the International School On Behavioral Neurogenetics, Worcester MA, 08/5-7.
  • George Kunos (LPS) presented a lecture "Endocannabinoids: Novel Lipid... Appetite" at the 9th International Congress on Obesity, San Paulo, Brazil, 08/24-29.
  • David Goldman presented a invited lecture “Endophenotypic Markers/Genetics of Schiz Neuroendocrine-Behavioral Interface” at the World Congress Psychiatry, Yokohama, Japan, 08/24-29.
  • Norman Salem Jr (LMBB) will Chair a symposium and present lectures "Alpha-Linolenic Acid—Metabolism and Physiological Function" and "N-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Function of Nervous System" at the 5th International Congress on Essential Fatty Acids & Eicsanoids, Taipei, Taiwan, 08/29–09/2.
  • George Kunos (LPS) presented a seminar, "Endocannabinoids...Cardiovascular." at the Department of Pharmacology, University of Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, 08/30.
  • David Goldman (LNG) presented a seminar, "Genomic Variation of Neurotransmitters” University of Bristol, UK, 08/31-09/1.
  • David Lovinger (LIN) will present lecture “Mechanisms Linking Postsynaptic Activation to Presynaptic Expression in Striatal Long-Term Depression” at the 4th International Conference of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors, Taormina, Italy, 09/15-20.

Articles

Ahmad A, Murthy M, Greiner RS, Moriguchi T, Salem N:  A decrease in cell size accompanies a loss of docosahexaenoate in the rat hippocampus. Nutr Neurosci 2002;5(2):103-13

Akbar M, Kim HY:  Protective effects of docosahexaenoic acid in staurosporine-induced apoptosis: involvement of phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase pathway. J Neurochem 2002;82(3):655-65

Anderson GM, Bennett AJ, Weld KP, Pushkas JG, Ocame DM, Higley JD:  Serotonin in cisternal cerebrospinal fluid of rhesus monkeys: basal levels and effects of sertraline administration. Psychopharmacology 2002;161(1):95-9

Barrientos LG, Gawrisch K, Cheng N, Steven AC, Gronenborn AM:  Structural characterization of the dilute aqueous surfactant solution of cetylpyridinium bromide/hexanol/sodium bromide. Langmuir 2002;18(10):3773-9

Cardozo-Pelaez F, Stedeford TJ, Brooks PJ, Song SJ, Sanchez-Raoms JR:  Effects of diethylmaleate on DNA damage and repair in the mouse brain. Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2002;33(2):292-8

Champoux M, Hibbeln JR, Shannon C, Majchrzak S, Suomi SJ, Salem N, Higley JD:  Fatty acid formula supplementation and neuromotor development in rhesus monkey Neonates. Pediatric Research 2002;51(3):273-81

Gao B:  Interaction of alcohol and hepatitis viral proteins: implication in synergistic effect of alcohol drinking and viral hepatitis on liver injury. Alcohol 2002;27(1):69-72

Gawrisch K, Eldho NV, Polozov IV:  Novel NMR tools to study structure and dynamics of biomembranes. Chem Phys Lipids 2002;116(1-2):135-51 (Sp Iss SI)

Gerdeman GL, Ronesi J, Lovinger DM:  Postsynaptic endocannabinoid release is critical to long-term depression in the striatum. Nature Neuroscience 2002;5(5):446-51

Goldman D:  DBH and the functional taxonomy of major depressive disorder. Biological Psychiatry 2002;51(5):347-8 (Editorial)

Hariri AR, Mattay VS, Tessitore A, Kolachana B, Fera F, Goldman D, Egan MF, Weinberger DR:  Serotonin transporter genetic variation and the response of the human amygdala. Science 2002;297(5580): 400-3

Hibbeln JR:  Seafood consumption, the DHA content of mothers' milk and prevalence rates of postpartum depression: a cross-national, ecological analysis. Journal of Affective Disorders 2002;69(1-3):15-29

Jeffrey BG, Mitchell DC, Gibson RA, Neuringer M:  n-3 fatty acid deficiency alters recovery of the rod photoresponse in rhesus monkeys. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science 2002;43(8):2806-14

Lee SM, Koh HJ, Park DC, Song BJ, Huh TL, Park JW:  Cytosolic NADP(+)-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase status modulates oxidative damage to cells. Free Radical Bio Med 2002;32(11):1185-96

Liu J, Tian ZG, Gao B, Kunos G:  Dose-dependent activation of antiapoptotic and proapoptotic pathways by ethanol treatment in human vascular endothelial cells - Differential involvement of adenosine. Journal of Biological Chemistry 2002;277(23):20927-33

Lovinger DM:  NMDA receptors lose their inhibitions. Nature Neuroscience 2002;5(7):614-6 (Editorial)

Niu SL, Mitchell DC, Litman BJ:  Manipulation of cholesterol levels in rod disk membranes by methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. Effects on receptor activation. Journal of Biological Chemistry 2002;277(23):20139-45

Osier MV, Pakstis AJ, Soodyall H, Comas D, Goldman D, Odunsi A, Okonofua F, Parnas J, Schulz LO, Bertranpetit J, Bonne-Tamir B, Lu RB, Kidd JR, Kidd KK:  A global perspective on genetic variation at the ADH genes reveals unusual patterns of linkage disequilibrium and diversity. Am J Hum Genet 2002;71(1):84-99

Rojas CV, Greiner RS, Fuenzalida LC, Martinez JI, Salem N, Uauy R:  Long-term n-3 FA deficiency modifies peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor beta mRNA abundance in rat ocular tissues. Lipids 2002;37(4):367-74

Teague WE, Fuller NL, Rand RP, Gawrisch K:  Polyunsaturated lipids in membrane fusion events. Cell Mol Biol Lett 2002;7(2):262-4

Wan WS, DePetrillo PB:  Ritonavir inhibition of calcium-activated neutral proteases. Biochem Pharmacol 2002;63(8):1481-4

Xu K, Liu XH, Nagarajan S, Gu XY, Goldman D:  Relationship of the delta-opioid receptor gene to heroin abuse in a large Chinese case/control sample. Am J Med Genet 2002;110(1):45-50

Abstracts

Cleveland A, Trenkle M, Lussier I, Higley J, Westergaard G:  CSF5-HIAA, life history and aggression in captive female rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). Am J Phys Anthropol  2002;55 (Suppl 34)

Gadomski AM, Bennett SM, Wissow LS:  Clinical utility of the GAPS in a rural setting. PEDIATRIC RESEARCH 2002;51(4):20 (Part 2, Suppl S)

Lefkowitz W, Lim SY, Lin YH, Loewke J, Majchrzak S, Salem N:  Where does the developing brain get its docosahexaenoic acid?  Pediatr Res 2002;51(4):1792 (Part 2, Suppl S)

Lopez JF, Higley JD:  The effect of early experience on brain corticosteroid and serotonin receptors in rhesus monkeys. Biol Psychiat 2002;51(8):294 (Suppl S)

Malhotra AK, Egan M, Lipsky RH, Bilder RM, Goldberg TE:  The COMT Val158Met polymorphism and human cognitive function. Biol Psychiat 2002;51(8):278 (Suppl S)

Marini AM, Banaudha K, McCall S, Zhu D, Lipsky R:  Alpha-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid-mediated neuroprotection requires TRKB receptor activation. Journal Of Neurochemistry 2002;8:26 (Suppl)

Yao JK, Hibbeln JR, Thomas EA, Glen L, Mahadik SP, Peet M:  Arachidonic acid signaling in schizophrenia: Pathophysiological and treatment implications. Biol Psychiat 2002;51(8):431 (Suppl S)

UPCOMING MEETINGS

NIAAA-Sponsored Workshops

The following NIAAA-supported meetings, conferences, and symposia have been scheduled for through December, 2002. Information on upcoming conferences, meetings, and events is available on the NIAAA Web site.

Date/Location

Meeting

Contact

09/ 23-24
Bethesda, Maryland.

"Workshop on Alcoholism Treatment Research Priorities and Health Disparities." (See page 20 for further details.)

Dr.Charlene E. Le Fauve

301-301-402-9401

clefauve@ niaaa.nih.gov

Dr. Cherry Lowman

301-443-0637

clowman@niaaa.nih.gov

09/ 24

Bethesda, Maryland

”Presynaptic Substrates of Alcohol Action"

Dr. Dennis Twombly

301-443-9334 dtwombly@niaaa.nih.gov

09/ 26-27

Bethesda, Maryland

Stress and Alcohol Abuse

Dr. Mark Egli,

301-594-6382
megli@niaaa.nih.gov

October 9-13

Brussels, Belgium

"The Genetics of Alcohol Dependence" (10th World Congress on Psychiatric Genetics)

Dr. Kenneth Warren, 301-443-4375, kwarren@niaaa.nih.gov

October 11-12

Berkeley, California

NIAAA is sponsoring three small regional meetings titled, "Ecological Modeling of Alcohol-Related Behavior," during October and November. The first is scheduled on October 11-12. The remaining dates and sites have not yet been determined.

Dr. Michael Eckardt

301-443-6107 meckardt@mail.nih.gov

October 25

Bethesda, Maryland.

"Role of Iron in Alcoholic Liver Disease," (co-sponsored by the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements)

Dr. Vishnudutt Purohit

 301-443-2689 vpurohit@niaaa.nih.gov

October 28-29
Bethesda, Maryland.

"Technical Assistance Workshop for Treatment, Prevention, and Services Research"

Dr. Robert Huebner

301-443-4344 bhuebner@niaaa.nih.gov

November 9-13
Philadelphia, PA

NIAAA, in collaboration with the American Medical Association, is supporting a panel on Underage Drinking at the 130th Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association

Dr. Suzanne Medgyesi-Mitschang

 301-443- 3756

smedgyes@niaaa.nih.gov

 

November 12-13
Chicago, Illinois.

NIAAA and the NIH Office of Rare Diseases are organizing a poster session and satellite symposium, "Alcoholic Pancreatitis," immediately preceding the American Pancreatic Association Annual Scientific Meeting scheduled on November 14-15

Dr. Vishnudutt Purohit

 301-443-2689 vpurohit@niaaa.nih.gov

November 21

Masur Auditorium

NIH Campus, Bethesda, Maryland.

Mark Keller Honorary Lecture and Award: Dr. Richard Deitrich has been selected to receive the annual Mark Keller Award and deliver the lecture.

Nancy Colladay

301-443-3860

ncollada@niaaa.nih.gov

 

December 3-4
Bethesda, Maryland

"Workshop on Combination Self-Reports and Biomarkers"

Dr. Raye Litten

 301-443-0636
rlitten@niaaa.nih.gov

Division of Basic Research

Dr. Ricardo Brown joined DBR from Morgan State University (MSU) where he was Professor and Chairman of the Department of Biology. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Biology from Oakwood College in Huntsville, AL in 1979 and his Doctorate in Physiology and Biophysics from Howard University (HU), Washington, D.C. in 1988. Dr. Brown completed postdoctoral training at the University of Cincinnati (1988), and at the National Institute on Aging (1988-1990). Dr. Brown’s research training and interest was focused on the cardiac electrophysiological effects of alcohol, and cardiovascular and respiratory adaptations during stress and aging. He joined the faculty in the Department of Physiology at Wayne State University (WSU) School of Medicine as an Assistant Professor (1990-1996) and was promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 1996. He has received several honors and awards, including the Wayne State University School of Medicine College Teaching Award. His research program at WSU (1990-2000) and MSU (2000-2002) generated over 37 peer-reviewed papers and received over $1 million in extramural grant support.

Dr. Brown holds active membership in the American Physiological Society, Research Society on Alcoholism, and American Heart Association. He recently completed a service assignment as a member of the NIH/NIGMS/Minority Access to Research Careers (MARC) Study Section (1998-2002). Dr. Brown is committed to the education, training and preparation of ethnic minorities to enter and complete doctoral programs in the biomedical sciences.

Dr. Marvin Salin comes to DBR from Mississippi State University where he was a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology. Marvin received his BS from Brooklyn College of the City University of New York and his MS and PhD degrees from Florida State University. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Georgia as well as a postdoctoral fellow and research assistant professor at Duke University. Marvin joined Mississippi State University in 1978. During his tenure at Mississippi State, Marvin was awarded several research and teaching awards from the university. Throughout his nearly 30 years in research and teaching, Marvin has authored nearly 150 publications in various aspects of biochemistry as well as served as thesis or dissertation advisor for nearly two dozen students. His major research thrust was in the area of active oxygen intermediates, protective systems, leukocyte metabolism as well as photochemistry and more recently he has investigated pathways and enzymes unique to extremophiles.

Marvin was a von Humboldt fellow in Germany, a Fulbright fellow in Malta and a Juan March Foundation fellow in Spain. In addition, he was a visiting professor of chemistry at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He is a retired lieutenant colonel in the United States Army Medical Service Corps.

Dr. Zhaoxia Ren has recently joined the Genomics and Proteomics Research Branch in the Division of Basic Research as a program director. She received a M.D. from China, and a Ph.D. in Molecular and Cell Biology from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She obtained her postdoctoral training at the Ophthalmic Genetics Branch, NEI/NIH. During her post-graduate training, she conducted a series of studies investigating molecular mechanisms of ocular inherited diseases, performed extensive genetic linkage analyses, disease locus mapping, and mutation identification. She is a co-author of several chapters in ocular biochemistry text book and has published several articles including two recent papers in the journal of Human Genetics.

Dr. Ren has won several awards including a grant award from the Helen Keller Eye Research Foundation, Sigma Xi Award for Excellence in Basic Research, and the NIH Fellows Award for Research Excellence. Prior to joining the NIAAA, she was a bioinformatics scientist in Infomax where she was a team leader and directed several projects involving data analyses for microarray gene expression, genomics, proteomics, and data modeling using bioinformatics algorithms.

Dr. Q. Max Guo has recently joined the Genomics and Proteomics Research Branch in the Division of Basic Research as a Program Director in Genetics. Max received his B.S. degree in Biology from Peking University of China. He then studied biochemistry and genetics at Ohio State University and received his Ph.D. in 1992. He did his postdoctoral training with Nobel Laureate J. Michael Bishop at UCSF on the roles of oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes in cancer from 1992 to 1997. He went on to study tumorigenesis using genomic approaches at NCI as a Senior Staff Fellow. Prior to joining NIAAA, Max was a tenure-track Assistant Professor of Oncology and the Director of Microarray Center at The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. His own research at Hopkins included interaction of various signaling pathways, genomic instability, and the role of centrosome in tumorigenesis. His lab has also developed 3 bioinformatics software packages (“ArrayEnvironment." “DFM-data flow management." and “Gene-Y”) for gene expression data analysis and database management, which are now freely available to the scientific community.

Dr. Tina Thomas has joined DBR as a 2002 Presidential Management Intern with interest in Science Policy. She received a B.A. in Political Science from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and a M.Ed. from John Carroll University in University Heights, Ohio. Most recently, she received a Ph.D. in Biology from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Her thesis investigated the use of an adult-derived stem cell in blood vessel formation. Dr. Thomas is eagerly awaiting publication of her thesis work in the Journal of Cellular Physiology.

During her graduate tenure, Dr. Thomas was awarded an NIH Pre-Doctoral Fellowship from the National Institute on Aging. She was also the recipient of several awards for presentation at scientific conferences including an award at the 2001 Mid-West Tissue Engineering Consortium (M-TEC)

Division of Clinical and Prevention Research

Katherine Harris, Ph.D., joined the staff of HSRB on 06/ 17. She is a Health Services Researcher and Health Economist and earned her doctorate in 1996 from the University of Minnesota. Prior to joining NIAAA she worked as Economist in the Health Program at RAND, a non-profit research organization. In this capacity, Dr. Harris worked on a wide range of projects on the topic of consumer and patient health plan, provider, and treatment choices. Dr. Harris has extensive experience in non-experimental research design and analysis using secondary data sources, including claims and enrollment data. The results of her work have been published in Health Services Research, The Journal of Health Economics, the Journal of Econometrics, and the Journal of Aging and Social Policy. Dr. Harris recently completed an NIAAA-funded study of the impact of substance abuse treatment benefit generosity on the health plan enrollment choices of problem drinkers. The results of this work will be published in a forthcoming issue of the health policy journal, Inquiry. Before joining RAND, Dr. Harris spent two years in New Orleans as an Assistant Professor in the Institute for Health Services Research at the Tulane University.

Marcia S. Scott, Ph.D., has joined the Prevention Research Branch as Program Director for Research on Special Populations, including studies of racial/ethnic minorities, women, the elderly, the disabled, and lesbian/gay populations. Dr. Scott comes to NIAAA from the federal Corporation for National and Community Service, where she managed research contracts concerned with the implementation and impacts of community-based social service programs. She also has conducted evaluations of substance abuse, violence, and HIV/AIDS education and prevention programs as well as other projects assessing youth development outcomes for work-based learning and workforce preparation. The programs have focused on services provided for high-risk youth; pregnant, postpartum, and homeless women and their children; and multicultural community planning groups serving an advisory role to local and state health departments.

As an evaluation research consultant, she worked with the Minority Health Research Laboratory at the University of Maryland to conduct evaluations of a cultural sensitivity needs assessment project and an HIV/AIDS education and prevention project located in a disadvantaged community. She also conducted evaluations of community-based violence prevention and conflict resolution programs. Before becoming an evaluation specialist, Dr. Scott served for many years as a registered clinical laboratory scientist conducting clinical assays in hospitals as well as commercial and research laboratories. In 1994 she earned a Ph.D. in health education from the University of Maryland at College Park with an emphasis on community and minority health, and her dissertation focused on violence among adolescents.

Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research

Recruitment

The Laboratory for Integrative Neuroscience (Dr. David Lovinger, Chief) is in the process of conducting a Tenure-Track search and recruitment for the position of Chief, Section on Behavioral Science and Genetics, LIN.

Term Appointments

Attila Brassai, MD/PhD, was appointed as a Short-term Visiting Scholar (07/1/02–09/30/02) in the Section on Neuroendocrinology, Laboratory of Physiologic Studies (LPS). Dr. Brassai received his MD (1987) and PhD (2000) in Medical Science from the University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania. Dr. Brassai served as a postgraduate research fellow, Oxford University, Department of Pharmacology, between 1991-1992 and is currently appointed as an Assistant Professor, Department of Pharmacology, University of Medicine & Pharmacy, Romania. His primary research interests focus on the experimental and clinical pharmacology of vasoactive drugs and neurotransmission, especially in the arteries. During his short stay, Dr. Brassai’s goal will be to characterize the mechanisms underlying the vasodilator/hypotensive action of endogenous cannabinoids using genetically modified mice lacking VR1 receptors or an enzyme that degrades endocannabinoids. 

Juan Guo, MD/PhD, was appointed as a Visiting Fellow (08/19/02-06/14/03) in the Section on Transmission Signaling, Laboratory of Molecular Physiology (LMP). Dr. Guo received her MD (1992) & Masters of Medical Science (1995) from Suzhou Medical College, People Republic of China and PhD (2002), in Physiology, from Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA. Dr. Guo’s doctoral research focused on molecular mechanisms of A-type potassium channel alterations in hypertension and signaling mechanisms of receptor-mediated modulation of M-type potassium channels and she acquired extensive training in patch-clamp standard molecular biology techniques during that period. While with LMP, Dr. Guo’s research will involve in vitro electrophysiological studies using neurons isolated from rats and possibly mice. She will address the question of how G protein coupling influences the pharmacology of CB1 cannabinoid receptors in regard to ion channel modulation and her training ties in extremely well with these goals. To carry out this research, Dr. Guo will receive training in molecular biology single neuron injection, calcium channel electrophysiology in neurons and florescence resonance energy transfer techniques.

Henry L. Puhl III, PhD, was appointed as a Staff Scientist (07/14/02-07/13/07) in the Section on Transmitter Signaling, LMP. Dr. Puhl received his PhD (1994), in Biochemistry, from Lehigh University, USA. From 1994-99 he served as a postdoctoral fellow, Laboratory of Neurobiology, Guthrie Research Institute. Prior to joining the LMP, Dr. Puhl served as a Senior Staff Scientist, Guthrie Research Institute, on a project investigating the mechanisms involved in sensory neuron specific gene expression of a TTX-resistant sodium channel and as the Chief Operating Officer of the Guthrie cDNA Resource Center. The Center, a nonprofit entity, provides cDNA clones of important signaling molecules to the research community. During his current appointment, Dr. Puhl’s principal research focus will involve the elucidation of mechanisms conveying sensory neuron specific expression of ion channels and receptor genes and this work is expected to be one of the lab’s significant long-term investigations. In addition, he will be responsible for providing guidance in molecular techniques to the staff of two new lab sections, to be established during FY03, who process expertise in other methodologies.

Ken D. Stark, PhD, was appointed as a Visiting Fellow (07/01/02-06/30/04) in the Section of Nutritional Neuroscience, Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry & Biophysics (LMBB). 

Dr. Stark received his PhD (2002) and MS (1997), in Human Biology & Nutritional Sciences, from the University of Guelph, and his BS with Distinction (1995), in Human Biology, from the University of Toronto. While pursuing his doctorate, his primary research focus was on dietary omega-3 fatty acids and cardiovascular health in postmenopausal women, he served as a research assistant, teaching assistant and sessional lecturer. He is the recipient of numerous academic awards, e.g., the American Oil Chemists’ Society 2000 Honored Student Award and their Health & Nutrition Division Student Excellence Award as well as the International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids 2000 Presidential Award. During his current appointment, Dr. Stark will perform studies of DHA metabolism in alcohol-exposed animals (both pig and rhesus studies are anticipated). In addition to training received within the lab on GC analysis of fatty acid methyl esters and other tissue lipid determinations, he will be trained to use NCI’s GC/MS for trace analysis of labeled fatty acid produced in association with the in vivo lipid metabolism aspect of his research.

Gabriella Stocca, PhD, was appointed as a Research Fellow Visiting Program (06/16/02–06/15/04) in the Section on Synaptic Pharmacology, Laboratory for Integrative Neuroscience (LIN). Dr. Stocca received her PhD (1995) and MS (1993), in Biophysics, from the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), Trieste, and her BS (1989), in Biology, from the University of Trieste, Italy. Dr. Stocca served as a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Physiology & Biophysics, Georgetown University, Washington DC (1996-98), then in the Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Vanderbilt University (1998-2002). During this appointment, Dr. Stocca’s research will focus on changes in presynaptic function that may underlie Huntington’s disease. One theory about the origins of neurotoxicity in the disease is that disrupted presynaptic function at corticostriatal glutamatergic synapses leads to loss of regulation of glutamate release and subsequently excitotoxicity. Dr. Stocca will be investigating this possibility in striatal slices from Huntington’s disease model mice. Electrophysiological experiments will focus on determining if the strength of synaptic transmission in altered in these mice relative to wild type controls at both the presymptomatic and symptomatic stages. The potency and efficacy of agonists at presynaptic modulatory receptors, such as adenosine A1 and metabotropic glutamate receptors, will also be examined at these disease stages. She will then determine if presynaptic calcium transients and modulation of these transients is altered in the Huntington’s disease model mouse striatum. The goal of this research is to better understand the mechanisms contributing to the neuropathology of the disease thereby gaining insight that may lead to treatment for the disorder.

Rui Sun, MD/PhD, was appointed as a Visiting Fellow (08/02/02-03/17/04) in the Section on Liver Biology, LPS. Dr. Sun received her MD (1982) from Shanxi Medical University and her PhD (2000), in Immunology, from Buthune University of Medical Science, Peoples Republic of China. Dr. Sun served as a Resident Physician (1983-90) in the Department of Oncology & Epidemiology, Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, followed by an Associate Professorship in the Shandong Cancer Biotherapy Center. She was appointed as a postdoctoral fellow in NCI’s Laboratory of Leukocyte Biology, Frederick MD (1995-96) then returned to China to become Associate Director of the Shandong Cancer Biotherapy Center & Professor of Immunology & Oncology (1996-present). Prior to joining LPS, Dr. Sun was appointed as a Visiting Fellow in NCI/DBS/FCRDC (2001-02). While with LPS, she will work under the direction of Dr. Bin Gao on projects of STATs and liver disease, liver immunology, liver regeneration and liver stem cells. Dr. Sun’s objective will be to identify the critical proinflammatory cytokines and signals involved in alcoholic liver disease and T cell-mediated hepatitis.

Honors and Awards

Dr. David Goldman, Chief, Laboratory of Neurogenetics, Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research, was the recipient of Researcher of the Year Award of the Research Society on Alcoholism and the National Institute of Mental Health Director's Award.

A number of NIAAA staff received an NIH Director’s Award for their participation in the development and implementation of NIAAA’s College Drinking Prevention Initiative: Stephen Long, Fred Donodeo, Vivian Faden, Geoffrey Laredo, Gayle Boyd, Joan Romaine, John Bowersox, Ann Bradley, Amy Matush, Susan Cahill, Nancy Colladay, Charles Crilley, Kathryn Grady, Kelly Green Kahn, Diane Miller, Diana Odonovan, Robert Huebner, Suzanne Medgyesi-Mitschang, and Rberta Wilhelm

Ms. Linda Hilley, NIAAA Deputy Executive Officer received the 2002 Martin K. Trusty Award for Excellence in Management.

Dr. Harold Perl, Chief, Health Services Research Branch, Division of Clinical and Prevention Research, received the 2002 NIAAA EEO Special Achievement Award “In recognition and appreciation of outstanding contributions to the EEO program.”

Prepared: November 2002

 

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