Ohio State receives $10M NCI grant to study impact of COVID-19 in first responders

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
Share on print

Researchers at The Ohio State University College of Medicine and The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center have been awarded a five-year, $10 million grant from NCI to study the long-term, longitudinal impact of COVID-19 on first responders, health care workers and the general population.

“This is one of the largest grants ever awarded to the College of Medicine,” said Peter Mohler, chief scientific officer for Ohio State Wexner Medical Center and vice dean for research for the Ohio State College of Medicine. It will fund the Center for Serological Testing to Improve Outcomes from Pandemic COVID-19 (STOP-COVID) at Ohio State, a new Serological Sciences Center of Excellence.

With this funding, researchers will learn more about the interactions among exposure risks, transmission, immune responses, disease severity, protection and barriers to testing/vaccination, with the goal of improving population health and clinical outcomes in the face of COVID-19.

“The Center to STOP-COVID will address some of the biggest questions in the field, such as ‘Can people be re-infected with COVID-19 once positive?’ ‘Why are some people more at risk for being infected and symptomatic?’ ‘Does infection with closely related viruses provide immunity or worsen COVID-19 disease outcomes?’ This whole scientific platform is based directly on the data our researchers collected during the earliest days of the pandemic, in March and early April,” Mohler said.

The Center to STOP-COVID will utilize state-of-the-art serological and molecular tests, developed at Ohio State, in a long-term study of first responders, a group at continual high risk of the specific coronavirus that causes COVID-19, as well as their household contacts. It is projected that nearly 2,000 participants will be followed over the five-year period.

“Stopping the spread of COVID-19 will require research that cross-cuts basic, translational and applied sciences,” said Eugene Oltz, chair of the Department of Microbial Infection and Immunity, and lead co-principal investigator for this study.

Joining Oltz as co-principal investigators of the center are Ashish R. Panchal, a professor of emergency medicine, who specializes in prehospital care at Ohio State Wexner Medical Center; Linda J. Saif, a world-renowned expert on coronaviruses at Ohio State’s College of Food, Agriculture and Environmental Sciences and College of Veterinary Medicine, and Ann Scheck McAlearney, a professor of family and community medicine at Ohio State with expertise in population health and applied health services research.

The center is partnering with the Columbus Police Department and Columbus Division of Fire, collaborations that were forged by Daniel Bachmann, associate professor of emergency medicine, and Gerard Lozanski, professor of pathology; Iris Velasco, industrial hygienist with Columbus Police; and Robert Lowe, medical director with Columbus Division of Fire. Center co-investigators include 46 interdisciplinary team members throughout five colleges across the university.

Researchers will learn more about critical aspects of transmission in both asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals; immune, host and viral determinants of disease outcome; and factors associated with immune protection, including vaccines. They will also identify best practices for communication of test results and information about COVID-19 to improve understanding of risk, transmission and protection, while reducing access barriers to testing and future vaccination opportunities.

“We’re excited to establish this important STOP-COVID Center. We’ll also integrate our center with the broader SeroNet community, consisting of National Cancer Institute testing agencies and other recipients of these grants. This will be invaluable in keeping abreast of current COVID-19 research,” said Oltz, who is also a member of the cancer biology research program in Ohio State’s Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Table of Contents

YOU MAY BE INTERESTED IN

Shearwood McClelland III’s grandfather was a ditchdigger who dreamed that his six Black daughters would become doctors. McClelland’s mother did not disappoint—she became the first Black woman board-certified in maternal fetal medicine in the history of the United States.  Now, McClelland is the chief medical officer of Cancer Health Equity at the University of Oklahoma...

As oncology enters a new era of precision medicine, the Food and Drug Administration’s evolving biomarker strategy aims to ensure that life-saving therapies are tailored to individual patient needs, fostering safer and more effective treatments.  Historically, therapies were approved with broad indications based on overall efficacy, even when outcomes for biomarker-positive and -negative patients were...

In the evolving landscape of pediatric oncology, survivorship research has become an essential component of our mission to improve long-term patient outcomes. At City of Hope, we are focused on not only curing childhood cancers but also ensuring that survivors live the healthiest lives possible. A significant part of my research has been dedicated to mitigating the long-term toxicities of cancer therapy—particularly cardiovascular complications that can arise decades after treatment.

Never miss an issue!

Get alerts for our award-winning coverage in your inbox.

Login