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Rigor and Reproducibility for Biomarkers in Type 1 Diabetes Clinical Research

$860K USD

Funder National Institutes of Health
Recipient Organization Not specified
Country USA
Start Date Feb 04, 2026
End Date Mar 25, 2027
Duration 414 days
Number of Grantees 1
Data Source Grants.gov
Grant ID 27f78383-af27-4294-8b40-589b0e3f0153
Grant Description
The main goal of this initiative is to establish a consortium with the overarching goal to advance the systematic identification, rigorous evaluation, validation, and assays harmonization of biomarkers that are critical to the prevention, diagnosis, and clinical management of Type 1 Diabetes (T1D). Despite significant advances in T1D research, there remains an urgent need for reliable and reproducible biomarkers that can capture the complexity of autoimmune processes, metabolic dysregulation, and individual patient variability. This initiative will leverage state-of-the-art methodologies in clinical chemistry, genomics, proteomics, metabolomics, immunophenotyping, and imaging, coupled with longitudinal patient cohorts and mining of Electronic Health Records (EHR). Within this consortium major efforts will be devoted to: 1) Harmonize established assays for biomarkers such as HbA1c and c-peptide, making sure that these assays are performed in a rigorous and reproducible manner in the clinical research community and in clinical practice. For this purpose, reference methods and materials will use a metrology approach and will be made available to the community; 2) Identify and validate other biomarkers that can be used for the prevention, diagnosis, and clinical management of T1D. It has been reported that the assays for several biomarkers routinely used in clinical research such as glucagon, amylin, chromogranin, insulin, pro-insulin and other pro-hormones are not reproducible across platforms or laboratories. For this purpose, this consortium will ensure that all assays for biomarkers routinely used in clinical research and for newly identified biomarkers are rigorously validated and assessed for reproducibility across several laboratories following a metrology approach. 
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