IKVBV
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2020Partners:VSSHP, University Hospital in Motol, CARDIOMED, University of Glasgow, IKVBV +32 partnersVSSHP,University Hospital in Motol,CARDIOMED,University of Glasgow,IKVBV,University of Medicine and Pharmacy of Târgu Mureş,Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital,UCD,MUI,LUMC,NIC,South Eastern Health and Social Care Trust,UZA,Semmelweis University,INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA SANTE ET DE LA RECHERCHE MEDICALE,BIOEF,KSSG,RLBUHT,Region Ostergotland,Sapienza University of Rome,UCPH,REGIONH,WSS,AUHT,CTU,Alb Fils Kliniken,ICS,Charité - University Medicine Berlin,University of Belgrade,ECRIN,Leipzig University,LSMU,University of Cagliari,Osakidetza,Jena University Hospital,MFUB,CHVNG/EFunder: European Commission Project Code: 603266more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2022Partners:University of Belgrade, UL, KLINIKUM DER UNIVERSITAET REGENSBURG, University of Ioannina, IIT +11 partnersUniversity of Belgrade,UL,KLINIKUM DER UNIVERSITAET REGENSBURG,University of Ioannina,IIT,Sorbonne University,IKVBV,R-Tech,University of Florence,University of Kent,UW,BIOIRC,Newcastle University,BSC,MFUB,Seven Bridges Genomics (United States)Funder: European Commission Project Code: 777204Overall Budget: 5,507,440 EURFunder Contribution: 5,507,440 EURAccording to the 2014 European Society of Cardiology Guidelines, cardiomyopathies are defined as structural and functional abnormalities of the ventricular myocardium that are unexplained by flow limiting coronary artery disease or abnormal loading conditions. There are four major classifications of cardiomyopathy: hypertrophic (HCM), dilated (DCM), restrictive (RCM), and arrhythmogenic right ventricular (ARVC). Familial cardiomyopathies (FCM) are most commonly diagnosed, or progress of the disease is monitored, through in vivo imaging, with either echocardiography or, increasingly, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The treatment of symptoms of FCM by established therapies could only in part improve the outcome, but novel therapies need to be developed to affect the disease process and time course more fundamentally. SILICOFCM project will develop in silico computational cloud platform which will integrate from stopped-flow molecular kinetic assays to magnetic resonance imaging of the whole heart, bioinformatics and image processing tools with state of the art computer models with the aim to reduce animal and clinical studies for a new drug development and optimized clinical therapy of FCM. The developed system will be distributed on the cloud platforms in order to achieve efficient data storage and high-performance computing, that can offer end users results in reasonably short time. Academic technical partners IIT, UOI, UL and BSC will be responsible for developing and integration of in silico cloud computational platform with multi-scale cardiac muscle modelling which include experiments on protein mutation in vitro from UNIKENT, UNIFI and UW. Bioinformatics tools will be integrated by US company SBG. Clinical partners UNEW, ICVDV, UPMC and UHREG will do retrospective and prospective studies. SME partner R-Tech will be in charge of regulatory issues and reports and BIOIRC will do the exploitation of the project.
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