Slashing research money won't help, may
hurt.
by Wolfe, Michael S.
Times are tough ... belts must be tightened ... everyone should
sacrifice. These are the messages Congress conveys as it debates the
next year's federal budget. But indiscriminate across-the-board
cuts harm areas that promote the general welfare and help stimulate the
nation's economy.
Biomedical research is one such area. Our nation's strong
commitment to the National Institutes of Health and our system of
funding has been the envy of other nations. Grants awarded by the NIH
fulfill two extraordinarily important needs. They allow scientists to
independently explore bold, creative ideas about health and disease
and--perhaps just as important--nurture the next generation of
researchers. Stipends and salaries bring young scientists into the lab
who might not otherwise find their way. They become the teachers and
investigators of the future or the pharmaceutical and biotechnology
researchers who bring new medicines to patients.
The NIH granting mechanism creates an entrepreneurial environment,
in which investigators bring their hypotheses to the marketplace of
ideas. Proposed research projects compete head to head and only the most
worthy rise to the top. Indeed, many worthwhile projects are not funded,
even in the best of times.
In tight times, though, more and more important proposals go
begging. The natural result is a dramatic decrease in the number of
submitted proposals, a decreased willingness to propose or fund
high-risk/high-payoff projects, frustration on the part of scientific
reviewers, and discouragement on the part of investigators--particularly
young ones.
This was the pattern in the mid-1990s, before Congress realized the
damage being done and compensated by nearly doubling the NIH budget over
a 5-year period. That move paid off--a 2006 study concluded that federal
investment in the research program at the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke earned a 4,600% return over 10 years
(Lancet 2006;367:1319-27).
Now, however, the damaging pattern of arbitrary cuts is being
repeated. NIH appropriations can't even keep pace with the 3.5%
inflation rate for biomedical research costs. President Bush's
proposed budget for fiscal year 2009 calls for flat-funding NIH--a
substantial cut in inflation-adjusted dollars and another huge step
toward reversing earlier gains.
The effects of these cuts are very real. In my own laboratory at
Harvard, our work on the molecular basis of Alzheimer's disease and
strategies to intervene therapeutically has already been hampered. The
National Institute of Aging slashed all grant budgets by 18%, giving us
18% less money to carry out one of our critical projects aimed at
understanding the biology of gamma-secretase, an enzyme involved in the
production of neurotoxic amyloid-[[beta].sub.42] peptide found the
cerebral plaques of Alzheimer's and an important therapeutic
target. Other NIH grants of ours have taken comparable hits, and our lab
is not alone: Many other biomedical research investigators face a
similar plight. These setbacks have undoubtedly slowed the pace of
essential research and ultimately will delay the availability of
treatments and cures for devastating diseases. Truly, millions of lives
are at stake.
But even from a strictly economic view, strong support for the NIH
is in the nation's best interest. Pharmaceutical and biotechnology
companies take their cues from discoveries that are reported openly by
federally funded researchers. Although these companies can't afford
to carry out long-term basic research, they ultimately reap great
profits from the research carried out in academic labs. And start-up
companies often spring from academic discoveries. Slowing the pace of
basic biomedical research translates into fewer start-ups, fewer jobs,
and a weaker economy.
In the long run, pharmaceutical and biotech companies enjoy the
biggest financial gain from NIH research monies. Given this situation,
it seems appropriate for these companies to reinvest a portion of their
profits directly into NIH-funded research. I say reinvest because,
ultimately, the industry as a whole prospers when academic labs can
continue their work. Culling a very small portion of their enormous
profits would not harm those industries but would make a tremendous
difference in supporting the basic research that enables them to bring
life-saving medicines to market.
Perhaps time is too short to implement these solutions for next
year's budget. In the meantime, nickel-and-diming the NIH will not
help solve the federal deficit. In the interest of saving federal
dollars today, we ultimately lose the larger return on the
tomorrow's investment. The proposed flat funding--actually a
substantial cut--truly will be disastrous. Even a 3.5% funding increase,
while an improvement over flat funding, would only allow researchers to
keep up with inflation.
To ensure that progress moves at a reasonable speed, predictable,
sustainable increases above the rate cost of biomedical inflation are
needed. Is there the political will to accomplish this in the current
fiscal climate? Let's hope so: Times are indeed tough--so tough
that we simply cannot afford to shortchange basic biomedical research.
BY MICHAEL S. WOLFE, PH.D.
DR. WOLFE is professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School and a
senior investigator in the center for neurologic diseases at Brigham and
Women's Hospital, both in Boston. He is also a member of the
Coalition for the Life Sciences, which advocates for biomedical research
and is based in Washington.
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