Request for Information (RFI) To Inform Development of the FY 2026-2030 NIH Strategic Plan for HIV and HIV-Related Research, 11843-11844 [2024-03122]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 32 / Thursday, February 15, 2024 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Information (RFI) To
Inform Development of the FY 2026–
2030 NIH Strategic Plan for HIV and
HIV-Related Research
AGENCY:
National Institutes of Health,
HHS.
ACTION:
Request for information.
Through this Request for
Information (RFI), the Office of AIDS
Research (OAR) in the Division of
Program Coordination, Planning, and
Strategic Initiatives (DPCPSI), National
Institutes of Health (NIH), invites
feedback from researchers, health care
professionals, advocates and health
advocacy organizations, scientific or
professional organizations, federal/state/
local government agencies, community,
and other interested constituents on the
development of the fiscal year (FY)
2026–2030 NIH Strategic Plan for HIV
and HIV-Related Research (the Plan).
The Plan (https://www.oar.nih.gov/sites/
default/files/NIH_StrategicPlan_
FY2021-2025.pdf) guides the NIH
investment, building on scientific
progress and opportunities for
advancing HIV research toward an end
to the pandemic.
DATES: Send comments on or before
April 1, 2024 to ensure consideration.
ADDRESSES: Submissions must be
submitted electronically via the
following website: https://rfi.grants.nih.
gov/?s=65b25017cf031643470daad2.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions about this request for
information should be directed to
Rachel I. Anderson, Office of AIDS
Research, 5601 Fishers Lane, Rockville,
MD 20852, HIVstrategicplan@nih.gov,
(301) 496–0357.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is in accordance with the NIH
Revitalization Act of 1993 that requires
the Office of AIDS Research to develop
a comprehensive plan, reviewed
annually and revised as appropriate,
that establishes HIV/AIDS research
priorities and serves as a guiding
framework for allocation of HIV/AIDS
funding across NIH. This notice also
complies with the 21st Century Cures
Act, wherein NIH and its institutes,
centers, and offices are required to
regularly update their strategic plans.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
Background
The most recent global statistics from
the Joint United Nations Programme on
HIV/AIDS (https://www.unaids.org/
sites/default/files/media_asset/
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Feb 14, 2024
Jkt 262001
UNAIDS_FactSheet_en.pdf) estimate
that in 2022, 39 million people were
living with HIV, 1.3 million people
acquired HIV, and 630,000 people died
from AIDS-related illnesses. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
(https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/statistics/
index.html) estimates that in the United
States in 2021, 1.2 million people were
living with HIV, with disparities by age,
race, gender, and ethnicity. There were
over 36,000 new HIV diagnoses
documented in the U.S. in 2021, and an
estimated 66% of people with
diagnosed HIV achieved viral
suppression. These statistics point to
the need for expanded access and
choice among current HIV prevention,
testing, and treatment methods, as well
as the need for an effective HIV vaccine
and a scalable HIV cure. Global patterns
of HIV epidemiology underscore the
necessity for research and
implementation strategies to address the
intersectional nature of health
disparities and social determinants of
health.
NIH OAR oversees and coordinates all
HIV research activities across NIH,
including both extramural and
intramural research, research training,
program evaluation, and HIV research
infrastructure and capacity
development. NIH supports a
comprehensive portfolio of research
representing a broad range of basic,
clinical, behavioral, social, translational,
and implementation science on HIV and
associated coinfections and
comorbidities. The Plan provides a
framework for developing the NIH HIV
research budget, articulates HIV
research priorities, and provides
information about NIH HIV research
priorities to the scientific community,
Congress, HIV-affected communities,
and the public at large.
Since 2015, the NIH HIV research
portfolio has been framed according to
five overarching priority areas (https://
grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/
NOT-OD-20-018.html): 1) Reduce the
incidence of HIV; 2) Develop nextgeneration HIV therapies; 3) Conduct
research toward HIV cure; 4) Address
HIV-associated comorbidities,
coinfections, and complications; and 5)
Advance cross-cutting areas of research
(including basic research, behavioral
and social sciences research, health
disparities, trainings, capacity-building
and infrastructure). To capitalize on
advances in HIV science that span
multiple areas (e.g., the use of longacting injectable ART for both
prevention and treatment) and to
promote a multidisciplinary and
integrative approach, OAR proposes a
new framework based on the HIV
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11843
research-to-practice continuum for
priority setting.
A New Framework for NIH HIV
Research
OAR is adopting a new framework for
the next Strategic Plan (FY 2026–2030)
that consists of four strategic goals:
Goal 1. Enhance discovery and
advance HIV science through
fundamental research.
Goal 2: Advance the development and
assessment of novel interventions for
HIV prevention, treatment, and cure.
Goal 3: Optimize public health impact
of HIV discoveries through translation,
dissemination, and implementation of
research findings.
Goal 4: Build research workforce and
infrastructure capacity to enhance
sustainability of HIV scientific
discovery.
The Goals in this new framework are
inclusive of scientific disciplines,
individuals, communities, and
populations—including women and
minoritized populations experiencing
health disparities. Within each Goal,
specific funding priorities will be
informed by public input. Priorities will
be reviewed annually and updated as
developments in science, the epidemic,
funding, and/or policy emerge.
The FY 2026–2030 Plan will be
developed in accordance with the
following foundational principles:
• Research to identify and address
HIV-related health disparities will be
essential to ensure that the benefits of
scientific advances reach all people and
communities affected by HIV, including
groups that have historically been
underrepresented and underserved.
• Research must address the unique
needs of people with HIV across the
lifespan, particularly as people,
including those born with HIV, age with
the virus.
• Engagement and partnership with
communities affected by HIV are
essential at every stage of HIV research,
from developing research questions and
planning and conducting research to
disseminating results and health
information and implementing new
practices.
Information Requested
Respondents are invited to propose
research priorities within each Goal as
described below. This feedback will
assist in informing the FY 2026–2030
Plan. Please note that response fields are
limited to 200 words. Professional
societies, advocacy organizations, and
other groups are encouraged to submit
a single collective response that reflects
the views of their membership.
E:\FR\FM\15FEN1.SGM
15FEN1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
11844
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 32 / Thursday, February 15, 2024 / Notices
Goal 1: Enhance discovery and
advance HIV science through
fundamental research.
Description: Fundamental research
seeks to expand understanding of the
biological, physiological, interpersonal,
and social-structural mechanisms of
HIV—i.e., how it operates as a virus and
as an infectious disease pandemic—at
the molecular, cellular, individual,
community, and population level. This
understanding provides the foundation
for the development of safe, effective,
and scalable tools to prevent, treat, and
ultimately cure HIV infection, as well as
reduce the risk and impact of comorbid
conditions and co-occurring infections.
Fundamental research includes
theoretical, pre-clinical, and
methodological research across
scientific disciplines.
Goal 2: Advance the development and
assessment of novel interventions for
HIV prevention, treatment, and cure.
Description: Knowledge gleaned from
fundamental, pre-clinical, and
translational research to inform clinical
trials and other intervention studies to
test the most promising products, tools,
or strategies for HIV prevention,
treatment, and cure and management of
its complications. Rigorous randomized
control trials, observational studies, and
other methodologies assess biological,
behavioral, and social outcomes of
novel interventions, as well as their
feasibility, acceptability, effectiveness,
and scalability in differing populations
and across the lifespan.
Goal 3: Optimize public health impact
of HIV discoveries through translation,
dissemination, and implementation of
research findings.
Description: As HIV prevention,
treatment, and cure interventions are
shown to be efficacious, their findings
must be translated to inform practice
and to connect with communities and
the general public in order to maximize
their public health impact.
Implementation research can identify
how best to facilitate effective
adaptation, uptake, integration, and
scale-up of evidence-based HIV
interventions. Information-sharing
through community partnerships,
research collaborations, and
dissemination activities can amplify the
impact of research and promote health
equity.
Goal 4: Build research workforce and
infrastructure capacity to enhance
sustainability of HIV scientific
discovery.
Description: Continued progress in
HIV science and its application requires
robust support for research tools,
computational resources,
instrumentation, data and physical
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:36 Feb 14, 2024
Jkt 262001
infrastructure, and workforce
development, particularly in
institutions that serve underrepresented
or high HIV burden populations or that
historically have been underfunded in
the United States and globally. Such
enhanced capacity-strengthening efforts
will promote diversity and inclusion in
the HIV research workforce.
Respondents are also invited to share
comments on the new framework.
Responses to this RFI Notice are
voluntary. The submitted information
will be reviewed by NIH staff and may
be made available to the public.
Submitted information will not be
considered confidential. This request is
for information and planning purposes
and should not be construed as a
solicitation or as an obligation of the
federal government or the NIH. No
awards will be made based on responses
to this Request for Information. The
information submitted will be analyzed
and may be used in reports or
presentations. Those who respond are
advised that the NIH is under no
obligation to acknowledge receipt of
your comments or provide comments on
your submission. No proprietary,
classified, confidential and/or sensitive
information should be included in your
response. The NIH and the government
reserve the right to use any nonproprietary technical information in any
future solicitation(s).
Dated: February 5, 2024.
Lawrence A. Tabak,
Principal Deputy Director, National Institutes
of Health.
[FR Doc. 2024–03122 Filed 2–14–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Name of Committee: Muscular Dystrophy
Coordinating Committee.
Date: March 18, 2024.
Time: 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET.
Agenda: The purpose of this meeting is to
bring together committee members,
representing government agencies, patient
advocacy groups, other voluntary health
organizations, and patients and their families
to update one another on progress relevant to
the Action Plan for the Muscular Dystrophies
and to coordinate activities and discuss gaps
and opportunities leading to better
understanding of the muscular dystrophies,
advances in treatments, and improvements in
patients’ and their families’ lives. The agenda
for this meeting will be available on the
MDCC website: https://www.mdcc.nih.gov/.
Registration: To register, please go to:
https://roseliassociates.zoomgov.com/
meeting/register/vJItc-6hrTsuHDKRDbVsTHLsMoFRuqyoRw#/registration.
Webcast Live: https://videocast.nih.gov/.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852 (Virtual
Meeting).
Contact Person: Glen Nuckolls, Ph.D.,
Program Director, National Institute of
Neurological, Disorders and Stroke (NINDS),
NIH, 6001 Executive Blvd., Bethesda, MD
20892, 301–496–5876, MDCC@nih.gov.
Any interested person may file written
comments with the committee by forwarding
the statement to the Contact Person listed on
this notice. The statement should include the
name, address, telephone number and when
applicable, the business or professional
affiliation of the interested person.
Anyone from the public can attend the
meeting virtually via the NIH Videocasting
website (https://videocast.nih.gov). Please
continue checking these websites, in addition
to the committee website listed below, for the
most up to date guidance as the meeting date
approaches.
More information can be found on the
Muscular Dystrophy Coordinating Committee
website: https://mdcc.nih.gov/.
Dated: February 9, 2024.
Miguelina Perez,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2024–03106 Filed 2–14–24; 8:45 am]
Office of the Secretary; Notice of
Meeting
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Pursuant to section 1009 of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended, notice is hereby given of a
meeting of the Muscular Dystrophy
Coordinating Committee (MDCC).
The meeting will be held as a virtual
meeting and will be open to the public
as indicated below. Individuals who
plan to view the virtual meeting and
need special assistance or other
reasonable accommodations to view the
meeting, should notify the Contact
Person listed below in advance of the
meeting. The meeting can be accessed
from the NIH Videocast at the following
link: https://videocast.nih.gov/.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
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Frm 00036
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Sfmt 4703
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The meeting will be closed to the
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552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), title 5 U.S.C.,
E:\FR\FM\15FEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 32 (Thursday, February 15, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11843-11844]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-03122]
[[Page 11843]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Request for Information (RFI) To Inform Development of the FY
2026-2030 NIH Strategic Plan for HIV and HIV-Related Research
AGENCY: National Institutes of Health, HHS.
ACTION: Request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this Request for Information (RFI), the Office of AIDS
Research (OAR) in the Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and
Strategic Initiatives (DPCPSI), National Institutes of Health (NIH),
invites feedback from researchers, health care professionals, advocates
and health advocacy organizations, scientific or professional
organizations, federal/state/local government agencies, community, and
other interested constituents on the development of the fiscal year
(FY) 2026-2030 NIH Strategic Plan for HIV and HIV-Related Research (the
Plan). The Plan (https://www.oar.nih.gov/sites/default/files/NIH_StrategicPlan_FY2021-2025.pdf) guides the NIH investment, building
on scientific progress and opportunities for advancing HIV research
toward an end to the pandemic.
DATES: Send comments on or before April 1, 2024 to ensure
consideration.
ADDRESSES: Submissions must be submitted electronically via the
following website: https://rfi.grants.nih.gov/?s=65b25017cf031643470daad2.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions about this request for
information should be directed to Rachel I. Anderson, Office of AIDS
Research, 5601 Fishers Lane, Rockville, MD 20852,
[email protected], (301) 496-0357.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice is in accordance with the NIH
Revitalization Act of 1993 that requires the Office of AIDS Research to
develop a comprehensive plan, reviewed annually and revised as
appropriate, that establishes HIV/AIDS research priorities and serves
as a guiding framework for allocation of HIV/AIDS funding across NIH.
This notice also complies with the 21st Century Cures Act, wherein NIH
and its institutes, centers, and offices are required to regularly
update their strategic plans.
Background
The most recent global statistics from the Joint United Nations
Programme on HIV/AIDS (https://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/UNAIDS_FactSheet_en.pdf) estimate that in 2022, 39 million
people were living with HIV, 1.3 million people acquired HIV, and
630,000 people died from AIDS-related illnesses. The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/statistics/) estimates that in the United States in 2021, 1.2 million
people were living with HIV, with disparities by age, race, gender, and
ethnicity. There were over 36,000 new HIV diagnoses documented in the
U.S. in 2021, and an estimated 66% of people with diagnosed HIV
achieved viral suppression. These statistics point to the need for
expanded access and choice among current HIV prevention, testing, and
treatment methods, as well as the need for an effective HIV vaccine and
a scalable HIV cure. Global patterns of HIV epidemiology underscore the
necessity for research and implementation strategies to address the
intersectional nature of health disparities and social determinants of
health.
NIH OAR oversees and coordinates all HIV research activities across
NIH, including both extramural and intramural research, research
training, program evaluation, and HIV research infrastructure and
capacity development. NIH supports a comprehensive portfolio of
research representing a broad range of basic, clinical, behavioral,
social, translational, and implementation science on HIV and associated
coinfections and comorbidities. The Plan provides a framework for
developing the NIH HIV research budget, articulates HIV research
priorities, and provides information about NIH HIV research priorities
to the scientific community, Congress, HIV-affected communities, and
the public at large.
Since 2015, the NIH HIV research portfolio has been framed
according to five overarching priority areas (https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-20-018.html): 1) Reduce the incidence
of HIV; 2) Develop next-generation HIV therapies; 3) Conduct research
toward HIV cure; 4) Address HIV-associated comorbidities, coinfections,
and complications; and 5) Advance cross-cutting areas of research
(including basic research, behavioral and social sciences research,
health disparities, trainings, capacity-building and infrastructure).
To capitalize on advances in HIV science that span multiple areas
(e.g., the use of long-acting injectable ART for both prevention and
treatment) and to promote a multidisciplinary and integrative approach,
OAR proposes a new framework based on the HIV research-to-practice
continuum for priority setting.
A New Framework for NIH HIV Research
OAR is adopting a new framework for the next Strategic Plan (FY
2026-2030) that consists of four strategic goals:
Goal 1. Enhance discovery and advance HIV science through
fundamental research.
Goal 2: Advance the development and assessment of novel
interventions for HIV prevention, treatment, and cure.
Goal 3: Optimize public health impact of HIV discoveries through
translation, dissemination, and implementation of research findings.
Goal 4: Build research workforce and infrastructure capacity to
enhance sustainability of HIV scientific discovery.
The Goals in this new framework are inclusive of scientific
disciplines, individuals, communities, and populations--including women
and minoritized populations experiencing health disparities. Within
each Goal, specific funding priorities will be informed by public
input. Priorities will be reviewed annually and updated as developments
in science, the epidemic, funding, and/or policy emerge.
The FY 2026-2030 Plan will be developed in accordance with the
following foundational principles:
Research to identify and address HIV-related health
disparities will be essential to ensure that the benefits of scientific
advances reach all people and communities affected by HIV, including
groups that have historically been underrepresented and underserved.
Research must address the unique needs of people with HIV
across the lifespan, particularly as people, including those born with
HIV, age with the virus.
Engagement and partnership with communities affected by
HIV are essential at every stage of HIV research, from developing
research questions and planning and conducting research to
disseminating results and health information and implementing new
practices.
Information Requested
Respondents are invited to propose research priorities within each
Goal as described below. This feedback will assist in informing the FY
2026-2030 Plan. Please note that response fields are limited to 200
words. Professional societies, advocacy organizations, and other groups
are encouraged to submit a single collective response that reflects the
views of their membership.
[[Page 11844]]
Goal 1: Enhance discovery and advance HIV science through
fundamental research.
Description: Fundamental research seeks to expand understanding of
the biological, physiological, interpersonal, and social-structural
mechanisms of HIV--i.e., how it operates as a virus and as an
infectious disease pandemic--at the molecular, cellular, individual,
community, and population level. This understanding provides the
foundation for the development of safe, effective, and scalable tools
to prevent, treat, and ultimately cure HIV infection, as well as reduce
the risk and impact of comorbid conditions and co-occurring infections.
Fundamental research includes theoretical, pre-clinical, and
methodological research across scientific disciplines.
Goal 2: Advance the development and assessment of novel
interventions for HIV prevention, treatment, and cure.
Description: Knowledge gleaned from fundamental, pre-clinical, and
translational research to inform clinical trials and other intervention
studies to test the most promising products, tools, or strategies for
HIV prevention, treatment, and cure and management of its
complications. Rigorous randomized control trials, observational
studies, and other methodologies assess biological, behavioral, and
social outcomes of novel interventions, as well as their feasibility,
acceptability, effectiveness, and scalability in differing populations
and across the lifespan.
Goal 3: Optimize public health impact of HIV discoveries through
translation, dissemination, and implementation of research findings.
Description: As HIV prevention, treatment, and cure interventions
are shown to be efficacious, their findings must be translated to
inform practice and to connect with communities and the general public
in order to maximize their public health impact. Implementation
research can identify how best to facilitate effective adaptation,
uptake, integration, and scale-up of evidence-based HIV interventions.
Information-sharing through community partnerships, research
collaborations, and dissemination activities can amplify the impact of
research and promote health equity.
Goal 4: Build research workforce and infrastructure capacity to
enhance sustainability of HIV scientific discovery.
Description: Continued progress in HIV science and its application
requires robust support for research tools, computational resources,
instrumentation, data and physical infrastructure, and workforce
development, particularly in institutions that serve underrepresented
or high HIV burden populations or that historically have been
underfunded in the United States and globally. Such enhanced capacity-
strengthening efforts will promote diversity and inclusion in the HIV
research workforce.
Respondents are also invited to share comments on the new
framework.
Responses to this RFI Notice are voluntary. The submitted
information will be reviewed by NIH staff and may be made available to
the public. Submitted information will not be considered confidential.
This request is for information and planning purposes and should not be
construed as a solicitation or as an obligation of the federal
government or the NIH. No awards will be made based on responses to
this Request for Information. The information submitted will be
analyzed and may be used in reports or presentations. Those who respond
are advised that the NIH is under no obligation to acknowledge receipt
of your comments or provide comments on your submission. No
proprietary, classified, confidential and/or sensitive information
should be included in your response. The NIH and the government reserve
the right to use any non-proprietary technical information in any
future solicitation(s).
Dated: February 5, 2024.
Lawrence A. Tabak,
Principal Deputy Director, National Institutes of Health.
[FR Doc. 2024-03122 Filed 2-14-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P