Larry Kaiser, M.D.
President

Susan Coulter, J.D.
Vice President, Office
of Institutional Advancement

Wendy K. Mohon
Editor

Michelle Rexroat
Web Developer I

October, 2006
Table of Contents

Clinical Research Center Receives $9.4 Million
and New Facility

Trials that help shape the future of medicine take place in new, expanded space

 

On a recent Thursday, Thomas Walker picked up a Houston Chronicle and read an article that would change his life.

Patient Thomas Walker, left, talks with John Reveille, M.D., professor at the UT Medical School at Houston, and Laura Diekman, senior research assistant, during a checkup at the University Clinical Research Center. Photo by Ester Fant

Patient Thomas Walker, left, talks with John Reveille, M.D., professor at the
UT Medical School at Houston, and Laura Diekman, senior research
assistant, during a checkup at the University Clinical Research Center.
Photo by Ester Fant

John D. Reveille, M.D., professor and director of the Division of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunogenetics at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, was recruiting patients with ankylosing spondylitis to participate in a clinical trial.

Walker, 66, was intrigued by the news. He had been living with the arthritic condition since the mid-1970s, and he was willing to test a medication that might loosen his stiff joints and alleviate pain in his spine and shoulders.

He quickly called the telephone number listed in the newspaper article. It led him to the University Clinical Research Center, or UCRC, where he became one of thousands of patients to enroll in trials that help shape the future of medicine.

300 Plus Trials in 20 Years

In the past two decades, faculty members at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and the UT M. D. Anderson Cancer Center have conducted more than 300 clinical trials at the center, which is located in and supported in part by Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center.

Recently, the National Center for Research Resources of the National Institutes of Health awarded the research center $9.4 million over the next five years to support and expand its program. This is the fifth grant renewal since the center’s initial NIH funding in 1986.

In conjunction with the grant award, UT and Memorial Hermann hosted in August the grand opening of the UCRC in its new, expanded space on the third floor of the hospital’s Robertson Pavilion. The facility is located next to the new Memorial Hermann Center for Clinical Innovation and Research.

The combined centers now have approximately 14,000 square feet to support clinical research studies. Prior space on the sixth floor of the Robertson Pavilion was about 4,000 square feet.

Center for Medical Breakthroughs

“Only 80 medical centers in the United States are fortunate to have one of these highly sophisticated units that are the birthplace for many of the medical breakthroughs that have occurred during the past half of a century,” said Pablo Okhuysen, M.D., professor of internal medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases and director of the UCRC since 2002.

A Quick Visit
The new home of the University Clinical Research Center allows the staff to continue its history of excellence in clinical research. The grant renewal supports the work of approximately 80 investigators, seven nurses, a biostatistician, an ethicist, a dietitian, a unit manager, a nursing manager, two clerical positions, a bioinformatics manager and two staff positions in the genetics core lab.In addition to the director are two associate directors: Dianna Milewicz, M.D., Ph.D., holder of the President George Bush Chair in Cardiovascular Medicine and director of the Division of Medical Genetics in the Department of Internal Medicine, and W. Keith Hoots, M.D., professor of pediatrics and internal medicine and director of the Division of Pediatric Hematology. Both hold faculty appointments at the UT Medical School at Houston and the UT Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences at Houston. Cheryl M. Chanaud, Ph.D., executive director of the adjacent Memorial Hermann Center for Clinical Innovation and Research, said the facility includes the addition of four inpatient rooms so that the center can begin conducting inpatient clinical research studies. “The center also has six outpatient rooms, a treatment room, two laboratories, a bioinformatics training room, a bionutrition room and centrally located nursing station,” Chanaud said.

UT Health Science Center at Houston President James T. Willerson, who is a former UCRC program director, said, “We are very proud of Dr. Pablo Okhuysen and his colleagues in this terrific achievement and very grateful to Memorial Hermann Hospital for their partnership in this endeavor. These funds and the outstanding physical facility at Memorial Hermann Hospital ensure UT Houston’s ability to conduct translational clinical research in the hospital and in very important areas of medical discovery.”

Juanita Romans, chief executive officer of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, said the research center gives patients access to important, experimental treatments.

“The UCRC is a flagship research center, currently supporting 80 to 100 unique and groundbreaking studies,” Romans said. “I believe that we have immense opportunities for new developments, clinical innovations and remarkable treatments that we have not yet envisioned.”

At the center, investigators study potential therapies for many types of diseases and injuries – from traumatic brain injury in children to pancreatic cancer to severe, sometimes fatal, automimmune disorders.

More than 3,200 Patients a Year

Madelene Ottosen, nurse manager at the research center, said the center’s medical staff sees more than 3,200 patients annually. For some, it may be a one-time visit to have their blood drawn for a genetics study. Others may come to the UCRC once a month for 10 years for long-term assessments.

“Each and every patient’s contribution is so important,” Ottosen said.

The center’s experienced staff is committed to patient safety, informed patient consent, protocol accuracy and thorough documentation of research results, Ottosen said.

In addition to the extra space and expanded programs the new facility offers, the UCRC is extending its services into the Lower Rio Grande Valley. The grant supports research on health access disparities led by Joseph B. McCormick, M.D., regional dean of the UT School of Public Health Brownsville Regional Campus and a faculty member in the UT Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences at Houston (GSBS).

In the near future, Okhuysen anticipates even more expansion.

“We are looking forward to a very bright future,” Okhuysen said. “With our strong partners and alliances, we are strongly embracing and facing head-on the challenge that the NIH initiative to re-engineer the clinical research enterprise has set forth. In the course of the coming months and years you will witness our further transformation to meet the challenge with the creation of the Center for Clinical and Translational Research.

“We plan to augment our clinical and translational research efforts in many areas, including additional services, study coordinators, assistance with regulatory support, consolidation of core laboratories and training in clinical research among others,” Okhuysen said.

Reveille, the George H. Bruce Jr. Professor in Arthritis and Other Rheumatic Diseases and a GSBS faculty member, is one of the top users of the UCRC. He said the center is a tremendous asset in the advancement of clinical research.

“We could not do the work without them. They’ve been invaluable to all our studies,” Reveille said.

Doing His Part

Walker, one of Reveille’s patients, said he would recommend the UCRC to any patient who wants to do his or her part for the advancement of medicine.

Since he enrolled in a medication trial, his joint pain has diminished, allowing him to enjoy his hobby of restoring antique furniture.

“I don’t know if I’m enrolled in the drug trial or if I’m taking a placebo, but something is working for me,” Walker said. “It has loosened up a lot of the tightness in my joints. I’m able to sit over a table and work on furniture. It’s definitely helped. Plus I’ve met a lot of nice people at the UCRC. “

Participating in the research makes me feel good – both physically and just knowing that I’m doing my part for research that could lead to more effective treatments for ankylosing spondylitis,” Walker said.

By Meredith Raine, Institutional Advancement