Opportunity

Simpler Grants.gov #HT942526PRPIIRA

Army Seeks Multidisciplinary Parkinson’s Disease Research Proposals (FY26 PRP IIRA)

Buyer

Dept. of the Army -- USAMRAA

Posted

June 18, 2026

Respond By

November 06, 2026

Identifier

HT942526PRPIIRA

NAICS

541715

This opportunity is a research grant solicitation from the U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (USAMRAA) for the FY26 Parkinson’s Research Program (PRP) Investigator-Initiated Research Award (IIRA). - Government Buyer: - Department of the Army - U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (USAMRAA) - Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs (CDMRP) - Products/Services Requested: - Multidisciplinary, high-impact research projects focused on Parkinson’s disease - Projects must address at least one of four specified FY26 PRP Focus Areas - Clinical trials are permitted - Preliminary data is required - Partnering Principal Investigator (PI) option is available - Funding Details: - Approximately $10 million in total funding - About five awards anticipated - Each award capped at $2 million total costs - Maximum period of performance is three years - Eligibility and Requirements: - Open to domestic and foreign, for-profit and nonprofit, public or private organizations - Active registrations required in SAM.gov, eBRAP.org, and Grants.gov - No specific OEMs or vendors are mentioned, as this is a research grant, not a product procurement.

Description

The fiscal year 2026 (FY26) Parkinson’s Research Program (PRP) Investigator-Initiated Research Award (IIRA) supports highly rigorous, multidisciplinary, high-impact research projects that have the potential to make an important contribution to Parkinson’s disease research. Research must address at least one of the four FY26 PRP Focus Areas. The award allows for a Partnering Principal Investigator option, requiring preliminary data and permitting clinical trials. The Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs (CDMRP) expects to allot roughly $10 million to fund approximately five awards with total cost caps of $2 million per award and a maximum period of performance of 3 years.

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