Professor Robert H. Dworkin
Robert
H. Dworkin, Ph.D. earned
his B.A. in 1971 from the University of Pennsylvania and his
Ph.D. in 1977 from Harvard University. He is currently Professor of
Anesthesiology, Neurology, Oncology, and Psychiatry, Professor in the
Center for Human Experimental Therapeutics, and Director of the
Anesthesiology Clinical Research Center at the University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry.
Bob is Director of the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction
Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks
(ACTTION), a public-private partnership with the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA); Co-chair of the Initiative on Methods,
Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials (IMMPACT); a member
of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Zoster
Working Group; and a Special Government Employee of the FDA Center for
Drug Evaluation and Research.
He is a member of the
Editorial Boards of Pain, Journal of Pain, and Current Pain and Headache
Reports,
and
has
previously served as a consultant to and member of the FDA Anesthetic
and Life Support Drugs Advisory Committee and as a member of the CDC
Measles, Mumps, Rubella, and Varicella Working Group. In 2005, he
received the American Pain Society’s Wilbert E. Fordyce Clinical
Investigator Award, which “recognizes individual excellence and
achievements in clinical pain scholarship and is presented to a pain
professional whose total career research achievements have contributed
significantly to clinical practice”, and in 2011, he received the
Eastern Pain Association’s John J. Bonica Award for his “many
contributions to the study, prevention, and treatment of chronic pain”.
The primary focus of Bob’s current research involves
methodologic aspects of analgesic clinical trials, especially
identifying factors that might increase the assay sensitivity of a trial
to detect differences between an active and a control or comparison
treatment. With research funding from the FDA, he and colleagues are
currently examining in acute and chronic pain trials the relationships
between study methodologic features and study outcomes, as well as
comparing the responsiveness to treatment effects of different primary
and secondary outcome measures. The overall objective of these efforts
— which are being conducted under the auspices of the ACTTION
public-private partnership — is to identify approaches to
improving the
efficiency and informativeness of clinical trials of pain treatments and
provide the foundation for an evidence-based approach to analgesic
clinical trial design.
In addition, he has for
many years
conducted studies of risk factors for the development of different types
of chronic pain, which have been funded by the National Institutes of
Health, the Department of Defense, and various pharmaceutical companies.
One of the major results of this research has been that patients with
greater acute pain are more likely to develop chronic pain, which
suggests that attenuating acute pain might prevent chronic pain.
Bob has served as a consultant to over 100 pharmaceutical and
device companies in the development and evaluation of analgesic and
antiviral treatments. As Director of the Anesthesiology Clinical
Research Center, he has served as principal investigator for a large
number of clinical trials of analgesic treatments. These studies have
examined treatments for various types of chronic pain — including
neuropathic pain conditions, low back pain, cancer pain, fibromyalgia,
and osteoarthritis — as well as treatments for acute pain in
herpes zoster
and for acute post-surgical pain.
Bob coedited
Emerging Strategies for the Treatment of Neuropathic Pain,
Psychosocial Aspects of Pain: A Handbook for Health Care
Providers,
Origins and Development of Schizophrenia: Advances in Experimental
Psychopathology, and
Progress in Experimental Personality & Psychopathology
Research,
and coauthored
Neuropathic Pain: Mechanisms, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Read
FDA Funds Rochester Researchers to Give Chronic and Acute Pain
Clinical
Trials a Makeover.