Doctor Talking to Mom & Daughter at MRI Machine

Investing in Patient-Centered Research Since 1982

Driving Collaboration and Leveraging Resources
to Address Unmet Needs

Millions of Americans are currently living with some form of vascular disease, whether it’s something they were born with or developed at some point in their lives. Vascular disease is often overlooked and underfunded; high-quality research that improves patients’ lives is far from the norm. In other disease spaces that have these issues, we have seen the benefit of improving research for the patient by partnering with the patient. Patient-centered research is a process that focuses on the actual lived experiences, preferences, and needs of patients living with the disease/symptoms of interest. It brings patients into the research design, execution, analysis, and dissemination as partners whose contributions are valued and important for making sure the research actually serves and benefits the broader patient population. 

Patient-centered research is lacking in the vascular disease space, and the Foundation to Advance Vascular Cures is committed to addressing this issue in several ways by:

  • Building capacity among patient and caregiver populations to understand, engage in, and advocate for patient-centered research

  • Raising awareness of the benefits of patient-centered research among researchers, providers, industry, and other stakeholders

  • Developing tools and resources to help train and prepare patients and researchers to conduct meaningful patient-centered research

  • Coordinating young professional and research-based grants that champion patient-centered research and patient-centered methodologies

Our dedication to patient-centered research includes bringing education and empowerment to underserved populations across the country, including minoritized groups. We strive to bring patient voices forward so that research better addresses their needs, and ultimately contributes towards better vascular health for all. Below are several examples of patient-centered research that we have either funded or participated in.

The 2022 Health Equity grants have been awarded to two teams of established clinician-scientists at leading academic medical centers and community health organizations.  

  • The Collaborative Patient-Centered Research (CPCR) grant is designed to fill a critical funding gap by rewarding high-risk, collaborative science that prioritizes the patient perspective.

  • The new Vascular Health Impact Grant (VHIG) is designed to fill a critical funding gap by rewarding innovative and collaborative community-based initiatives.

2022 Health Equity Grants

2021 Grant Awards

The 2021 CPCR grants were awarded to two teams of established clinician-scientists at four leading academic medical centers.

The grant funded 1-2-year projects that address the unmet needs related to patient-centered technology for harnessing & using data remotely in PAD and/or CLTI.

2020 Grant Awards

The 2020 CPCR grants were awarded to two teams of established clinician-scientists at four leading academic medical centers, supported by a collaborative research laboratory and computational resources at UCSF.

The program’s goal is to identify biomarkers of poor response to procedures, to improve the patient prognosis and identify new targets for future drugs. Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) cause significant disability and mortality. Improved technologies have enabled less-invasive treatments, but their long-term effectiveness is limited and new interventions are often necessary. Multiple studies suggest certain molecules in our blood influence vascular repair and may serve as biomarkers to predict a positive or negative outcome.

The impact on patient lives would be enormous if researchers could identify the biological factors (biomarkers) that predict the success or failure of these procedures for individual patients. The proposed projects would enable major progress toward the ultimate development of validated tests to predict this response.

2016 Grant Awards

The 2016 CPCR grants were awarded to teams led by Dr. Karen Ho at Northwestern University and Dr. Larry Kraiss at the University of Utah School of Medicine.

2012 Grant Award

Understanding Peripheral Restenosis: Genomic and Proteomic Determinants of Vascular Intervention (PREDICT-PVI).