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Completed OTHER RESEARCH-RELATED NIH (US)

Diet Related Inflammation and Kidney Function Decline in Racial/Ethnic Minorities

$1.88M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF DIABETES AND DIGESTIVE AND KIDNEY DISEASES
Recipient Organization Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Country United States
Start Date Apr 15, 2021
End Date Dec 31, 2023
Duration 990 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10392475
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY/ ABSTRACT: The primary purpose of this proposal is to provide Tanya Johns, MD, MHS, a clinical investigator in the Department of Medicine (Division of Nephrology) at Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ Montefiore Medical Center, with the skills and mentored guidance necessary to develop into an independent clinical researcher

and a nationally recognized expert focused on reducing health disparities in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Dr. Johns’ research proposal examines the relationship between dietary patterns and inflammation, and its association with kidney function decline in racial/ethnic minorities. Growing evidence suggests that pro-

inflammatory dietary patterns may adversely impact kidney health; but this has not been fully investigated, especially in minority populations who bear an excess burden of CKD. Dr. Johns will leverage large, well- established NIH funded cohorts of racial/ethnic minorities with longitudinal data to test the association of diet-

induced inflammation with kidney function decline. She will also examine the effects of the Multicultural Healthy Diet (anti-inflammatory dietary pattern) intervention on CKD risk, and the feasibility in individuals with established CKD. Specifically, she aims to: 1) characterize dietary patterns in community-dwelling African

Americans (n= 5,306) and Hispanics (n= 16,415) and its associations with systemic inflammation and kidney function decline; 2) evaluate the effect of the Multicultural Healthy Dietary (MHD) intervention on CKD risk in an ongoing clinical trial of older predominately racial/ethnic minority participants (n= 277); and 3) conduct a small

pilot study (n= 20) to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of a MHD-like intervention in racial/ethnic minorities with CKD. To successfully complete these research aims and transition to independence, Dr. Johns has developed a comprehensive 3-year research program that includes: i) mentorship from a multidisciplinary

team with expertise in nutrition, longitudinal data analyses for cohort studies, clinical trials, comparative effectiveness studies, and health disparities research; ii) completion of courses in nutritional epidemiology, biostatistics, comparative effectiveness research, and clinical trials; iii) dissemination of her work through

presentations at national research meetings and publications in high impact journals; iv) grantsmanship activities geared towards writing a competitive R01 by the end of her award period. Each member of Dr. Johns’ mentorship team has a long track record of successfully mentoring junior investigators, and is fully committed

to working together to help her achieve career benchmarks and attain research independence. The resources at Albert Einstein provides an ideal environment in which to complete her training and research goals. With the knowledge and expertise gained from her research and career development activities, Dr. Johns will be well

poised to evaluate novel risk factors for CKD, which will inform the development and implementation dietary or other interventions to halt kidney disease initiation and progression in racial/ ethnic minorities. With this award, Dr. Tanya Johns will be well prepared for a career as an independent clinical investigator. (30 lines; Limit 30

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Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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