1Department of Neurological Surgery, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio.
2Department of Neurological Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Neurosurg. 2021 Jun 11;136(1):287-294. doi: 10.3171/2020.11.JNS203871. Print 2022 Jan 1.
The Neurosurgery Research and Education Foundation (NREF) provides research support for in-training and early career neurosurgeon-scientists. To define the impact of this funding, the authors assessed the success of NREF awardees in obtaining subsequent National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding.
NREF in-training (Research Fellowship [RF] for residents) and early career awards/awardees (Van Wagenen Fellowship [VW] and Young Clinician Investigator [YCI] award for neurosurgery faculty) were analyzed. NIH funding was defined by individual awardees using the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting tool (1985-2014).
Between 1985 and 2014, 207 unique awardees were supported by 218 NREF awards ($9.84 million [M] in funding), including 117 RF ($6.02 M), 32 VW ($1.68 M), and 69 YCI ($2.65 M) awards. Subspecialty funding included neuro-oncology (79 awards; 36% of RF, VW, and YCI awards), functional (53 awards; 24%), vascular (37 awards; 17%), spine (22 awards; 10%), pediatrics (18 awards; 8%), trauma/critical care (5 awards; 2%), and peripheral nerve (4 awards; 2%). These awardees went on to receive $353.90 M in NIH funding that resulted in an overall NREF/NIH funding ratio of 36.0:1 (in dollars). YCI awardees most frequently obtained later NIH funding (65%; $287.27 M), followed by VW (56%; $41.10 M) and RF (31%; $106.59 M) awardees. YCI awardees had the highest NREF/NIH funding ratio (108.6:1), followed by VW (24.4:1) and RF (17.7:1) awardees. Subspecialty awardees who went on to obtain NIH funding included vascular (19 awardees; 51% of vascular NREF awards), neuro-oncology (40 awardees; 51%), pediatrics (9 awardees; 50%), functional (25 awardees; 47%), peripheral nerve (1 awardees; 25%), trauma/critical care (2 awardees; 20%), and spine (2 awardees; 9%) awardees. Subspecialty NREF/NIH funding ratios were 56.2:1 for vascular, 53.0:1 for neuro-oncology, 47.6:1 for pediatrics, 34.1:1 for functional, 22.2:1 for trauma/critical care, 9.5:1 for peripheral nerve, and 0.4:1 for spine. Individuals with 2 NREF awards achieved a higher NREF/NIH funding ratio (83.3:1) compared to those with 1 award (29.1:1).
In-training and early career NREF grant awardees are an excellent investment, as a significant portion of these awardees go on to obtain NIH funding. Moreover, there is a potent multiplicative impact of NREF funding converted to NIH funding that is related to award type and subspecialty.
神经外科研究与教育基金会(NREF)为在培训中和早期职业的神经外科医师-科学家提供研究支持。为了确定这种资助的效果,作者评估了 NREF 获奖者获得后续美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助的情况。
分析了 NREF 在培训中(住院医师研究奖学金[RF])和早期职业奖项/获奖者(Van Wagenen 奖学金[VW]和神经外科教员青年临床研究员[YCI]奖)。使用 NIH 研究组合在线报告工具(1985-2014 年),由单个获奖者确定 NIH 资助情况。
1985 年至 2014 年间,218 项 NREF 奖项共支持了 207 位获奖者(9840 万美元的资助),其中包括 117 项 RF(6020 万美元)、32 项 VW(1680 万美元)和 69 项 YCI(2650 万美元)。神经肿瘤学(79 项奖励;RF、VW 和 YCI 奖励的 36%)、功能神经外科(53 项奖励;24%)、血管神经外科(37 项奖励;17%)、脊柱神经外科(22 项奖励;10%)、儿科神经外科(18 项奖励;8%)、创伤/重症监护(5 项奖励;2%)和周围神经外科(4 项奖励;2%)是获得的专项资助。这些获奖者随后获得了 3.539 亿美元的 NIH 资助,这使得 NREF/NIH 的总体资助比例达到 36.0:1(按美元计算)。YCI 获奖者最常获得后期 NIH 资助(65%;2.8727 亿美元),其次是 VW(56%;4110 万美元)和 RF(31%;1.0659 亿美元)获奖者。YCI 获奖者的 NREF/NIH 资助比例最高(108.6:1),其次是 VW(24.4:1)和 RF(17.7:1)获奖者。随后获得 NIH 资助的专项获奖者包括血管神经外科(19 名获奖者;血管 NREF 奖项的 51%)、神经肿瘤学(40 名获奖者;51%)、儿科神经外科(9 名获奖者;50%)、功能神经外科(25 名获奖者;47%)、周围神经外科(1 名获奖者;25%)、创伤/重症监护(2 名获奖者;20%)和脊柱神经外科(2 名获奖者;9%)。专项 NREF/NIH 资助比例分别为血管神经外科 56.2:1、神经肿瘤学 53.0:1、儿科神经外科 47.6:1、功能神经外科 34.1:1、创伤/重症监护 22.2:1、周围神经外科 9.5:1、脊柱神经外科 0.4:1。与获得 1 项 NREF 奖项的获奖者相比(29.1:1),获得 2 项 NREF 奖项的获奖者的 NREF/NIH 资助比例更高(83.3:1)。
在培训中和早期职业的 NREF 赠款获奖者是一项极好的投资,因为这些获奖者中的很大一部分获得了 NIH 资助。此外,NREF 资助转化为 NIH 资助的效果具有强大的倍增效应,这与奖项类型和专科有关。