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Bringing Clinical Findings to the Practice of Medicine
Discoveries Propel Treatment, Further Investigation of Common Orthopaedic Conditions
| Source: AAOS
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - March 5, 2008) - Today, at the 75th Annual Meeting of the
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
(AAOS), the Kappa Delta Sorority and the Orthopaedic Research and Education
Foundation (OREF) bestowed four research awards on scientists who are
closing the chasm between basic research and clinical medicine.
At its Golden Anniversary celebration in 1947, the Kappa Delta Sorority
announced the establishment of the Kappa Delta Research Fellowship in
Orthopaedics, the first-ever award created to honor achievements in the
field of orthopaedic research. The first annual award, a single stipend of
$1,000, became available to the Academy in 1949 and presented at our annual
meeting in 1950. Since then, the Academy has presented the Kappa Delta
Awards to persons who have performed research in orthopaedic surgery that
is of high significance and impact.
The sorority increased the number of awards from one to three in 1961, and
over time their dollar value has been raised. At present, three annual
awards of $20,000 each are given. Two awards are named for the national
presidents who were instrumental in the creation of the awards: Elizabeth
Winston Lanier and Ann Doner Vaughn. The third is known as the Young
Investigator Award.
The fourth award is the OREF Clinical Research Award. Established in 1995,
the award recognizes outstanding clinical research related directly to
musculoskeletal disease or injury.
The 2008 Kappa Delta Young Investigator Award was given to Chuanju Liu,
PhD, from the New York University School of Medicine Department of
Orthopaedic Surgery. Dr. Liu was accompanied by Yi Luan, MD, PhD; Yan
Zhang, MD, PhD; Ronald Damani Howell, BS; and Li Kong, MD, in presenting
"ADAMTS-7 and ADAMTS-12: Two Novel Cartilage-Degrading Metalloproteinases."
The Young Investigator Award is given to outstanding authors who are under
40 years of age or no more than seven years beyond training. In his study,
Dr. Liu details his team's discovery of two new enzymes -- ADAMTS-7 and
ADAMTS-12 -- that are particularly responsible for cartilage degeneration.
This degeneration is the hallmark of osteoarthritis, a condition that
affects millions and is the leading cause of physical disability, increased
in health care costs and impaired quality of life in industrialized
nations.
By identifying these novel metalloproteinases, Dr. Liu has enabled the
future study of the means to potentially block these enzymes' devastating
effects. "The Young Investigator Award strongly encourages my research,"
he said. The award comes at a pivotal point in his career and promotes his
continued research into ADAMTS-7 and ADAMTS-12. "I was very excited," Dr.
Liu says of receiving the award. "It is a great honor for me, and for my
research team."
Karen Lyons, PhD, of the MacDonald Research Laboratories Department of
Orthopaedic Surgery, and Vicki Rosen, PhD, of the Harvard School of
Medicine's Department of Developmental Biology, won the 2008 Kappa Delta
Ann Doner Vaughan Award for their work, "In Vivo Studies of BMP Pathway
Activities in Chondrogenesis." This study outlines their shared efforts,
spanning 20 years, to expand on the role of the bone morphogenic protein
(BMP) signaling pathway in cartilage, and the most fundamental aspects of
chrondocyte behavior in living tissue. The relevancy of this information
cannot be overstated, especially in light of recent statistics showing that
by 2030 the number of individuals affected by arthritis will increase by an
astonishing 16 percent. By identifying the BMP's effect on articular
chondrocytes, Drs. Lyons and Rosen have opened the possibility to tailor
research and treatment using the most beneficial avenue.
The third Kappa Delta Award, named in honor of Elizabeth Winston Lanier,
went to Michele C. Battié, PhD, and co-authors Tapio Videman, MD, PhD;
Jaakko Kaprio, MD, PhD; Laura E. Gibbons, PhD; Kevin Gill, MD; Janna
Saarela, MD, PhD; and Leena Peltonen, MD, PhD, for "The Foundation of a New
Paradigm of Disc Degeneration: The Twin Spine Study." They challenged
traditional explanations of degenerative disc disease, which has
conventionally been attributed to joint "wear and tear." Dr. Battié's team
identified several alternative influences, most notably genetic, and found
that hereditary factors play a far greater role than previously thought.
Hans Pape, MD, associate professor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
at University of Pittsburgh, won the OREF Clinical Research Award for his
paper "Effect of Changing Strategies of Fracture Fixation on Immunologic
Changes and Systemic Complications After Multiple Trauma: Damage Control
Orthopaedic Surgery." Dr. Pape examined the crucial moments after a
polytrauma experience in which the initial surgery or surgeries took place.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, Dr. Pape identified a subset of trauma
victims for whom early intervention in the form of fracture fixation and
other surgery was detrimental rather than a step on the road to healing.
These individuals, referred to as "borderline," are at a higher risk for
deterioration following surgery and, thus, a staged surgical approach --
for instance, temporized femoral stabilization -- reduces the risk of
complications and worsening outcomes for them.
More
about OREF and the Kappa Delta Award
Previous Kappa Delta Award Winners
About
AAOS
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