U24DA055330
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium Data Coordinating Center - Project Summary
The landmark Healthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) study will provide a representative reference data resource to the scientific community, enabling unprecedented investigation of neurodevelopment and the impact of environmental, genetic, and biological factors on brain and behavioral health and developmental trajectories from infancy through childhood.
Through this study, the Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium (HBCD-NC) will recruit and retain a sociodemographically diverse cohort of 7,500 pregnant women from 24 sites across the U.S. and follow these families and their children through the first decade of life. Children will undergo rigorous data collection across modalities, including neuroimaging, neurophysiology, behavioral and cognitive assessments, and collection of biospecimens via a balanced protocol developed by field-leading experts.
Building upon the substantive complementary experience and expertise of its multidisciplinary team and leveraging multiple population-specific technical innovations, the Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium Data Coordinating Center (HDCC) will provide the leadership, management, and oversight of data collection, quality control, curation, processing, management, sharing, and analytics to facilitate and support the activities of the HBCD-NC and ensure its success.
Included is the development and implementation of an optimized, state-of-the-art MRI protocol harmonized for the first time in infants/toddlers across all three major vendors, which leverages the latest innovations in scanner technology with age-specific structural, microstructural, quantitative, functional, and spectroscopy sequences. Also detailed is a targeted EEG protocol linked with a field-leading automated processing pipeline for developmental EEG, which provides innovative derivative measures.
Data and project management will occur through a centralized tracking and distribution platform linked to a high-throughput compute backbone, which overcomes limits of commercially-available systems for management and integrated processing of multimodality data from large, multi-site studies. High-performance computing will be supported through unique access to a combination of field-leading resources.
Detailed procedures are outlined for secure collection, management, and analysis of personally identifiable information (PII) data, including flexible methods designed to accommodate heterogeneity in electronic health record systems across sites.
Finally, substantive HBCD-specific enhancements to the Data Exploration and Analysis Portal (DEAP 2.0) will produce a crucial tool for data access to authenticated users while promoting best practices in reproducible statistical analysis and providing flexible computation without the need to download restricted-access data.
The result of this field-leading combination of HDCC resources will be a state-of-the-art, longitudinal dataset of unparalleled scale, which provides deep understanding of the biological and environmental factors that affect a child's health, brain, and behavioral development, and shapes research, clinical care, and public policy for decades to come.
The landmark Healthy Brain and Child Development (HBCD) study will provide a representative reference data resource to the scientific community, enabling unprecedented investigation of neurodevelopment and the impact of environmental, genetic, and biological factors on brain and behavioral health and developmental trajectories from infancy through childhood.
Through this study, the Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium (HBCD-NC) will recruit and retain a sociodemographically diverse cohort of 7,500 pregnant women from 24 sites across the U.S. and follow these families and their children through the first decade of life. Children will undergo rigorous data collection across modalities, including neuroimaging, neurophysiology, behavioral and cognitive assessments, and collection of biospecimens via a balanced protocol developed by field-leading experts.
Building upon the substantive complementary experience and expertise of its multidisciplinary team and leveraging multiple population-specific technical innovations, the Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium Data Coordinating Center (HDCC) will provide the leadership, management, and oversight of data collection, quality control, curation, processing, management, sharing, and analytics to facilitate and support the activities of the HBCD-NC and ensure its success.
Included is the development and implementation of an optimized, state-of-the-art MRI protocol harmonized for the first time in infants/toddlers across all three major vendors, which leverages the latest innovations in scanner technology with age-specific structural, microstructural, quantitative, functional, and spectroscopy sequences. Also detailed is a targeted EEG protocol linked with a field-leading automated processing pipeline for developmental EEG, which provides innovative derivative measures.
Data and project management will occur through a centralized tracking and distribution platform linked to a high-throughput compute backbone, which overcomes limits of commercially-available systems for management and integrated processing of multimodality data from large, multi-site studies. High-performance computing will be supported through unique access to a combination of field-leading resources.
Detailed procedures are outlined for secure collection, management, and analysis of personally identifiable information (PII) data, including flexible methods designed to accommodate heterogeneity in electronic health record systems across sites.
Finally, substantive HBCD-specific enhancements to the Data Exploration and Analysis Portal (DEAP 2.0) will produce a crucial tool for data access to authenticated users while promoting best practices in reproducible statistical analysis and providing flexible computation without the need to download restricted-access data.
The result of this field-leading combination of HDCC resources will be a state-of-the-art, longitudinal dataset of unparalleled scale, which provides deep understanding of the biological and environmental factors that affect a child's health, brain, and behavioral development, and shapes research, clinical care, and public policy for decades to come.
Awardee
Funding Goals
TO SUPPORT BASIC AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE, BIOMEDICAL, BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, EPIDEMIOLOGIC, HEALTH SERVICES AND HEALTH DISPARITY RESEARCH. TO DEVELOP NEW KNOWLEDGE AND APPROACHES RELATED TO THE PREVENTION, DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT, ETIOLOGY, AND CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG ABUSE AND ADDICTION, INCLUDING HIV/AIDS. TO SUPPORT RESEARCH TRAINING AND RESEARCH SCIENTIST DEVELOPMENT. TO SUPPORT DISSEMINATION OF RESEARCH FINDINGS. SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH (SBIR) LEGISLATION IS INTENDED TO EXPAND AND IMPROVE THE SBIR PROGRAMS TO EMPHASIZE AND INCREASE PRIVATE SECTOR COMMERCIALIZATION OF TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPED THROUGH FEDERAL SBIR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, INCREASE SMALL BUSINESS PARTICIPATION IN FEDERAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOSTER AND ENCOURAGE PARTICIPATION OF SOCIALLY AND ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS AND WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS IN THE SBIR PROGRAM. THE LEGISLATION INTENDS THAT THE SMALL BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER (STTR) PROGRAM STIMULATE AND FOSTER SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION THROUGH COOPERATIVE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CARRIED OUT BETWEEN SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS AND RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, FOSTER TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BETWEEN SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS AND RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, TO INCREASE PRIVATE SECTOR COMMERCIALIZATION OF INNOVATIONS DERIVED FROM FEDERAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOSTER AND ENCOURAGE PARTICIPATION OF SOCIALLY AND ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS AND WOMEN-OWNED SMALL BUSINESS CONCERNS IN TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Missouri
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 3500% from $800,000 to $28,801,292.
Washington University was awarded
Healthy Brain Child Development National Consortium Data Coordination Center
Cooperative Agreement U24DA055330
worth $28,801,292
from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in September 2021 with work to be completed primarily in Missouri United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years 9 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.310 Trans-NIH Research Support.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Data Coordinating Center (U24).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/26/25
Period of Performance
9/30/21
Start Date
6/30/26
End Date
Funding Split
$28.8M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$28.8M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for U24DA055330
Transaction History
Modifications to U24DA055330
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
U24DA055330
SAI Number
U24DA055330-4103460802
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75N600 NIH National Insitute on Drug Abuse
Funding Office
75NA00 NIH OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
Awardee UEI
L6NFUM28LQM5
Awardee CAGE
2B003
Performance District
MO-90
Senators
Joshua Hawley
Eric Schmitt
Eric Schmitt
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0892) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $5,000,000 | 53% |
| National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0893) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $2,251,839 | 24% |
| National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0886) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,800,000 | 19% |
| Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0846) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $399,998 | 4% |
Modified: 9/26/25