Opportunity
Simpler Grants.gov #HT942526MRPTSA
Melanoma Research Program Team Science Award for Multidisciplinary Melanoma Research
Buyer
Department of the Army -- USAMRAA
Posted
October 04, 2023
Respond By
October 14, 2026
Identifier
HT942526MRPTSA
NAICS
541715
The Department of the Army, through the US Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (USAMRAA), is inviting applications for the Melanoma Research Program (MRP) Team Science Award to advance melanoma research and patient care. - Government Buyer: - Department of the Army - US Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (USAMRAA) - Program Details: - Supports hypothesis-driven, multidisciplinary research projects in melanoma - Requires collaboration among 2-3 Principal Investigators (PIs) on a single project - Multi-institutional partnerships are encouraged - Consumer collaboration with the melanoma community is optional - Funding and Awards: - Approximately nine awards anticipated - Each award capped at $2.1 million total cost - Maximum period of performance is three years - Funding instrument: cooperative agreements and grants - Eligibility: - Open to all eligible applicants; no restrictions specified - Products/Services Requested: - No specific products or OEMs requested; this is a research grant for services (multidisciplinary melanoma research projects) - Unique Requirements: - Emphasis on team science and collaboration across institutions - Projects must be hypothesis-driven and focused on advancing melanoma science and patient care
Description
The fiscal year 2026 Melanoma Research Program Team Science Award supports multidisciplinary studies aimed at advancing melanoma research and patient care. This funding requires multiple Principal Investigators to collaborate on a single research project, encouraging multi-institutional partnerships. The program expects to fund approximately nine awards with a total cost cap of $2.1 million per award over a maximum period of three years. Applicants must submit a pre-application and receive an invitation to submit a full application. The awards are funded by the Department of the Army through the USAMRAA and focus on hypothesis-driven research to impact patient outcomes.