Funding Opportunities
CTSI supports a wide range of research efforts at the University of Pittsburgh through a diverse portfolio of funding opportunities. CTSI also offers Bonus Funding for some Pilot Awards. Specific Bonuses may not be available for every funding opportunity. For more information, visit the Bonus Funding page.
Open Application Period
Re-Impact Pilot Award
The Re-Impact pilot awards are designed to stimulate new translational research on devices and/or interventions that can address clinical needs, biological processes, or therapeutics to improve the lives of older adults.
Submission Deadline: Friday, January 24, 2025 by 11:59PM
Funding: $25,000
CTSI Core: Pilots
Closed Application Period
Quantitative Methodologies Pilot Program (QuMP)
The Quantitative Methodologies Pilot Program (QuMP) is a funding opportunity that supports interdisciplinary, translational research involving quantitative methodologies, such as mathematical modeling, statistics, biostatistics, and epidemiology. The QuMP Program specifically aims to encourage and support novel applications of quantitative methodologies, either through the novel use of existing methodologies or through the development of entirely new quantitative methodologies. Projects funded by the program are expected to involve trans-disciplinary collaborations between translational investigators and quantitative scientists.
Funding: Up to $30,000 per award
CTSI Core: Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Research Design
The Pitt Innovation Challenge (PInCh)
The Pitt Innovation Challenge (PInCh®) is seeking your bold solution to an important health problem.
The CTSI created the PInCh program in order to stimulate the translation of novel problem-focused research into the community by giving researchers a venue to be creative, develop new ideas, and work with people beyond their usual sphere of collaborators.
Funding: Up to $555,000 in total awards
CTSI Core: Innovation
The Virginia Kaufman Pain Research Challenge
The Virginia Kaufman Pain Research Challenge is a funding opportunity for ideas and solutions associated with both physiological and psychological pain. Research solutions can address the dynamics of pain, causes and alleviation of pain, and treatment to prevent and/or mitigate pain. Solutions should address a specific problem in the area(s) of pain including mechanism, treatments, modalities, and impacts of acute and chronic pain.
Funding: Up to $50,000 per award
CTSI Core: Innovation
Dissemination and Implementation Science Pilot Award (DISPA)
These pilot awards will support new or ongoing research that focuses on using dissemination and implementation research methods to support the adoption, implementation or maintenance of an evidence-based practice or program. Proposed research may be at earlier stages along the translational continuum if the focus is on designing or developing innovations with D&I in mind.
Investigators are also encouraged to consider their work in the context of health equity (e.g., including equity as an implementation outcome or metric; or focusing on expanding healthcare access for vulnerable populations).
Funding: Up to $50,000 per award
CTSI Core: IMPACT
Exploring Existing Data Resources Rapid Pilot
CTSI includes in its mission a goal to increase the development and dissemination of skills throughout the University’s research workforce. To address this, we are offering Pilot Awards for investigators to incorporate into their research the use of existing data resources of a type that they have never used before. Examples of existing data resources include “-omics” data, large national databases, physical science databases, biorepositories, public records, marketing databases, and social media. This Pilot Award should stimulate exploration, novel analyses, or novel applications of the many biorepositories and data collections that are already available or develop new skills for the principal investigator and team.
Funding: Up to $25,000 per award
CTSI Core: Pilot
Commercialization-Innovations Phase II Pilot Awards
CTSI at the University of Pittsburgh, in partnership with the office of the Chief Scientific Officer (CSO) of UPMC, seeks applications for the Commercialization-Innovations Phase II Pilot Awards. These awards are part of a series of funding opportunities to stimulate research for which implementation may involve inventions or commercialization.
Funding: Up to $75,000 per award
CTSI Core: Pilot
Implementation Lab Pilot Award (ILPA)
The Implementation Lab Pilot Awards (ILPA) aim to facilitate connections between Pitt researchers and organizational Health Operations Partners that enable them to conduct Dissemination and Implementation research aimed at getting priority evidence-based practices into clinics and communities.
Funding: Up to $50,000 per award
CTSI Core: Pilot
Social and Structural Influences of Health (SSIH)
The goal of the SSIH Pilot Award is to co-create research in collaboration with communities and/or community-based organizations that amplify community priorities and expertise. The structure of this award will include support from the CTSI Community PARTners Core, and we intend that built-in support will encourage applications from investigators who may not have prior experience with community-partnered methodology.
Funding: $35,000
CTSI Core: Pilot/Community
Health Sciences Team Science and Leadership Program
The overall goal of this program is to create, mentor, and support mid-career scholars from SHS to lead high impact inter-professional teams that address society’s most pressing health-related challenges. Awards of $150,000 across two years will support the creation of teams of scholars comprising faculty from at least three of the SHS (Dental, Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Public Health). Projects should propose a compelling approach for addressing scientific or health challenges requiring broad expertise from across the health sciences.
Funding: $150,000
CTSI Core: Pilot
Collaboration in Health Sciences and Engineering Startup (CHEERS) Grant
The goal of this program is to enhance collaboration between faculty members in SSoE and those in the six Schools of the Health Sciences (SHS) – i.e., the Schools of Medicine, Public Health, Pharmacy, Dental Medicine, Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, and Nursing. The financial support will be utilized to establish or expand trans-disciplinary collaborations that will ultimately lead to the submission of collaborative external grant applications in the areas of human health and medicine.
Funding: $40,000
CTSI Core: Pilot
Engage Pilot Award Program
The Engage program seeks projects that will test new ways to involve individuals in maintenance of their own health. In particular, we are looking for solutions that give agency and responsibility primarily to the non-medical individual. In this way, Engage applications will be distinct from other initiatives that develop treatments or interventions that will be pushed from medical providers to patients.
Funding: $45,000
CTSI Core: Pilot
BRIDGE Pilot Award
This award is designed to open up research that will bridge the gap between large data sets (e.g. million of electronic health records, millions of consumer purchases, genomic data or months of wearable fitness sensor data) and personalized care for the individual or region.
Funding: Up to $30,000 per award.
CTSI Core: Pilot
Women's Pain Research Challenge
The Women’s Pain Research Challenge is a funding program to advance innovative solutions and diverse teams that address either physiological or psychological aspects of pain in women. This can include the dynamics of pain, causes and alleviation of pain, and/or treatments to prevent or mitigate pain.
Funding: $150,000
CTSI Core: Innovation
Sustainability in Healthcare Challenge
The University of Pittsburgh’s first funding opportunity to promote environmental, economic, and social sustainability in healthcare.
Funding: Up to $40,000 per award.
CTSI Core: Innovation
Health Disparities Arising from Artificial Intelligence Pilot Awards
Artificial Intelligence (AI) I is revolutionizing healthcare by enhancing diagnoses and risk assessment through predictive models, recommending personalized treatments, and streamlining healthcare delivery. However, there is growing concern that AI may inadvertently perpetuate or even exacerbate existing health disparities. This funding opportunity is designed to encourage new research addressing ensuring that AI in healthcare promotes equity and benefits all populations, especially historically underserved and marginalized groups.
Funding: $50,000
CTSI Core: Pilot