The receipt and referral process is an important aspect of the overall NIH peer review system. The role of the Division of Receipt and Referral (DRR) in the Center for Scientific Review (CSR) is to assign each application to a review group that has the expertise to evaluate the scientific and technical merit of the application and to one or more Institutes/Centers (ICs) for funding consideration. While many NIH policies give authority to the DRR to determine assignments, staff of the DRR consults with Institutes/Centers, Scientific Review Officers (SROs) and Integrated Review Group (IRG) Chiefs, and applicants to reach the most appropriate assignment. This description of the process is divided into three main sections: Submission of the Application, Checking the Application for Compliance with NIH Policies, and Assignment of the Application for Review and Funding Consideration.
Submission of the Application
The NIH is making a transition from a paper to electronic submission process via Grants.gov. This is also accompanied by a switch to the SF 424 family of forms. While these efforts are resulting in many changes in the format and submission process, they are not changing the fundamental practices and philosophy of the submission and assignment processes. Up to date information on the electronic submission process is found on the NIH Electronic Submission Web site.
The DRR continues to handle all competing applications. This includes new, renewal (formerly called competing continuation), resubmission (formerly termed amended), and revision (formerly competing supplement) applications submitted to the NIH. For electronic submission, all applications must identify a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) that may be a Program Announcement (PA/PAS/PAR) or a solicitation via a Request for Applications (RFA). Noncompeting progress reports are sent to a separate central location and then distributed to the funding Institute or Center. Contract proposals are sent directly to the soliciting Institute or Center and administrative supplements are sent directly to the Institute or Center that is funding the parent grant. The receipt, referral, review, and award process occurs three times each year. Within each cycle there are numerous receipt dates/deadlines.
Information about grant application submission, links to application instructions, policy requirements, and other topics is found at the Office of Extramural Research Grants Home Page.
Investigators may include a cover letter (for electronic submissions this is a PDF attachment) with their application. Use of the structured format described in the application instructions will aid in the use of knowledge management approaches for assignments. The cover letter may address one or more of the following points:
· Suggestions regarding the Institutes or Centers that are most likely to be interested in the scientific area being studied; if the investigator has discussed the application with a specific program director, this information should be included.
· Suggestions regarding the review of the application at the IRG level, the study section level, and/or a list of the scientific areas that are critical to understanding the application. For multidisciplinary applications it is very helpful for the investigator to highlight the main disciplinary or methodological thrust of the application. It is NOT APPROPRIATE to include a list of potential reviewers by name. It is appropriate to mention individuals by name with whom there is a conflict of interest and who should not be considered as reviewers. CSR provides the referral guidelines for assignment to IRGs and Study Sections on our Review Group Descriptions Web page as a source of information for applicants. Applicants may wish to contact SROs or the DRR (301-435-0715) with specific questions about a potential assignment.
· Other important information about the application, such as the reason for a late submission.
For paper submissions investigators should use a single package for a grant application, even for very large grant applications. Conversely, inclusion of more than one grant application in a single package may cause problems if the multiple submissions are not recognized. Applications must be delivered by the United States Post Office or a delivery/courier service. Individuals may not personally deliver their applications to NIH.
Permission is not given in advance for a late submission. NIH has established a window of consideration in which applications must be received in order to have a possibility of acceptance. All late applications (paper and electronic submission) must include a cover letter that provides details on the specific reasons for the delay. Further information is found in the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts (OD-08-027); A special opportunity for continuous submission of R01, R21, and R34 applications is available for appointed members of NIH study sections (OD-08-026).
If problems (missing pages, incorrect pages included, etc.) are identified after an application has been submitted (for electronic applications after the two day period allowed for checking/corrections), investigators will need to follow the NIH policies as described in the Notice OD-08-082 and accompanying Best Practices.
Checking the Application for Compliance with NIH Policies
In the initial processing of applications submitted in paper format data items from the face page, budget pages, and checklist are entered into a database to create a unique record for each application. If an application is submitted in response to a Request for Applications (RFA) or Program Announcement (PA, PAR, or PAS), the identifying number entered on line 2 is important for subsequent processing of the application. Omission of information or errors by the applicant may lead to confusion or delays in handling the application. The most current version of the application kit must be used.
For electronic submissions, an application must identify an appropriate Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA); this will be critical in determining the validations that will be applied in processing the application. If errors are identified in the validation process, the errors must be addressed and a changed/corrected application resubmitted to Grants.gov. The data elements entered will be directly transferred to the NIH IMPAC database.
Processing and assignment of applications in the DRR is the first opportunity to check for compliance with important NIH policies. Among the policy issues addressed for paper and electronic submissions in the DRR are--
· The application must be complete and must contain sufficient information for the review group to evaluate the scientific and technical merit of the application
· Submissions of similar, essentially identical, or identical applications to one or more components of the PHS are not allowed.
· The two-resubmisison limitation: the number of resubmissions of an application is limited to two. There is no longer a time limit for the submission of the two resubmissions. Resubmission applications must include an Introduction that discusses the previous review, and the text should be marked to show where changes have been made
· Applications submitted in response to a Request for Applications (RFA) are normally new applications. If an RFA submission is not successful, a subsequent application should be submitted as a new application, not a resubmission.
· Applications that are changing activity code should also be submitted as new applications.
· Approval is needed for applications requesting $500,000 or more in direct costs: NIH policy requires that any competing application (new, renewal, resubmission, revision) requesting $500,000 or more in direct costs in any year must be accepted by an Institute or Center prior to assignment for review. For more information, view the related NIH Guide Notice. Investigators need to contact the Institute or Center at least six weeks prior to the submission of the application. Note that any Facilities and Administrative costs of subcontracts are not included.
· Approval is also needed for conference grant applications.
· Applications proposing research on Human Embryonic Stem Cells must indicate the registration number of the cell lines to be used or include a statement that one from the NIH registry will be used.
· Format of applications: Applications are checked to make sure that they follow the font style, type size, page limits, margin size and other requirements specified in the application instructions. This applies to paper submissions and the PDF attachments of electronic submissions. When noncompliant applications are identified, the investigators may be contacted and asked to correct the problem quickly. Further checking occurs at the study section and in rare cases noncompliant applications may be deferred for a later review.
· An eRA Commons User Name must be provided for all Principal Investigators.
· Inclusion of at least three reference letters for fellowship applications (predoctoral, postdoctoral, and senior fellowships) and mentored research career development award applications.
Other important aspects of a grant application such as information on human subjects research, use of vertebrate animals, and plans for resource sharing are scrutinized at other stages of the grant process. Applications that do not address all the critical components may be delayed in the review process or for potential funding.
Assignment of the Application for Review and Funding Consideration
Investigators sometimes ask how much of the application is read in making an assignment. The honest answer is as much of the application as needed to make the determination. Referral staff have access to the entire application, not just the title and Abstract/Description. In many cases, they concentrate on the Abstract/Description and Specific Aims in making an assignment, with attention also paid to the Significance and Research Methods sections. Requests made by investigators and the assignment of previous applications are also considered. Some applications are quite easy to assign for both review and Institute/Center consideration, while others are more difficult. Referral staff regularly discuss the assignment of applications or how to handle unusual situations. The assignment of a grant application involves a series of decisions.
· Determination of activity code. There are more than 100 activity codes to support research and research training ranging from individual fellowships through very large center grants. Nearly all Institutes and Centers (ICs) use the R01 and F32; a single or only a few ICs use other activity codes. Particularly for electronic submissions the identification of the correct Funding Opportunity Announcement is critical for determination of the activity code. Activity Codes s are identified in the NIH system by a letter and number code; examples include the following:
F32 Individual NRSA Postdoctoral Fellowship
K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Research Career Development Award
P01 Program Project
R01 Research Grant
R43 Small Business Innovation Research Phase I (R44 for Phase II)
More information is available via the NIH Grants Web page.