Live RSS
Federal Grant · National Institutes of Health

Limited Competition for the Continuation of the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) Administrative Resource (U24 Clinical Trials Optional)

Last verified by NonDilute: 2026-06-08. Official notice and agency instructions control.

Healthcare TechBiotech university-researchernon-profitestablished-company
The pitch

If you manage or co-lead an established academic consortium studying adolescent health and substance use, this renewal funds your administrative operations and shared resources.

Award range
Unspecified
Closes
Open date
May 22, 2025
Difficulty
High
Source
Grants.gov
Agency
National Institutes of Health
Last verified
2026-06-08
Fit language
Possible fit only
Apply at grants.gov →

Report stale or inaccurate summary

What this is

NCANDA is an ongoing longitudinal study examining how alcohol exposure impacts neurodevelopment in teenagers across multiple U.S. sites. This U24 mechanism funds the administrative backbone and shared resources needed to coordinate the consortium, manage data, and support participating institutions. This is a continuation award for an existing, mature research network—not startup funding. Clinical trials participation is optional, suggesting flexibility in research focus.

Who can apply

Eligibility not specified in provided text. U24 mechanisms typically require institutional affiliation (university, research hospital, or nonprofit research organization) and prior participation in NCANDA or equivalent consortium role. Solo founders and early-stage startups are unlikely candidates.

Topics: ncanda consortium · adolescent neurodevelopment · alcohol research · nih u24 mechanism · multi-site research infrastructure

Public-source funding discovery only. This summary is generated from public agency data and may be incomplete or stale. NonDilute is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any government agency. Official notices and agency instructions control. NonDilute does not determine eligibility, provide grant-writing advice, or guarantee funding.