UCSF Is Top Public Recipient of NIH Funding for 15th Year

By Nina Bai | UCSF.edu | February 15, 2022

Alex Marson examines data in the UCSF CRISPR Lab

For the 15th year in a row, UC San Francisco garnered the top spot among public institutions in funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 2021. UCSF continued to rank highly among all public and private institutions nationwide, ranking fourth overall.

The University was awarded nearly 1,500 NIH grants and contracts, amounting to more than $709 million in funds – a $23 million increase from the 2020 total and a new record for NIH funding to a public university.

The highly competitive funds represent awards and contracts to the UCSF Schools of Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy, as well as the Graduate Division, during the 2021 fiscal year that ended in September. They support UCSF scientists in their efforts to understand the causes of, and discover treatments for, diseases ranging from cancer to diabetes to neurodegenerative diseases. In the past year, NIH funding continued to provide critical support for COVID-19 research amid the ongoing pandemic.

“This NIH funding has helped UCSF researchers gain new fundamental insights in biology, develop new therapies for intractable diseases, and address health inequities,” said UCSF Chancellor Sam Hawgood, MBBS. “We are proud of our researchers’ work and the promise it offers for vulnerable individuals in California and throughout the world.”

Top NIH Funding Recipients, 2021

  1. Johns Hopkins University: $824,856,274
  2. New York University:  $809,311,644
  3. Duke University: $731,237,450
  4. UC San Francisco: $709,018,244
  5. Leidos Biomedical Research: $653,182,427
  6. University of Pennsylvania: $641,789,096
  7. Washington University: $623,444,643
  8. Stanford University: $611,354,637
  9. University of Michigan at Ann Arbor: $609,038,367
  10. Massachusetts General Hospital: $600,667,106

 

TOP UCSF NIH RECIPIENTS: PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS AND CENTERS

1. Nevan Krogan, PhD, QBI, $14.4 million 2. Alan Ashworth, PhD, Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, $9.27 million 3. Monica Gandhi, MD, MPH, AIDS & COVID Research, $9.12 million 4. Harold Collard, MD, MS, CTSI, $8.22 million 5. Steven Deeks, MD, Delaney AIDS Research Enterprise to Cure HIV, $6.95 million

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

1. New York University School of Medicine: $809,281,610 2. UC San Francisco: $629,550,692 3. Duke University: $608,453,942 4. Washington University St. Louis: $576,556,160 5. Johns Hopkins University: $566,920,824

Read more at UCSF.edu