Central Biorepository Spotlight: Cardiovascular Disease

Cardiovascular Health Improvement Project (CHIP)

The Prechter Program’s Longitudinal Study of Bipolar Disorder is an active study of the Central Biorepository (CBR), a unit of the UMMS Office of Research, which facilitates discovery and improves healthcare outcomes by providing high-quality, highly annotated biospecimens donated for basic, clinical and translational research.

The unit receives biospecimens and data from U-M contributors and collaborators across a spectrum of medical research. These samples, annotated with clinical and research data, are accessible to members of the U-M research enterprise.

Types of Biospecimens

  • Aortic tissue samples
  • Plasma
  • DNA
  • Serum

Population

6,000 participants and counting!

Comprehensive phenotype data are available. Currently enrolling patients with:

  • Aortic disease
  • Bicuspid aortic valve
  • Connective tissue disorders
  • Heart failure
CHIP Samples

Disclaimer: Patients who have multiple diagnoses (TAA, BAV, etc.) are calculated in the total
number of phenotypes more than once.

Access

The Central Biorepository enables access to thousands of CHIP biospecimens from Michigan Medicine patients and offers secure linkage to laboratory and clinical data offered by the Data Office.

Get started:

Willer headshot

"CHIP utilizes the UMMSCentral Biorepository because of the high-level management of biospecimens with the capability to perform DNA
isolation, subaliquoting, and sample shipment to assist us with downstream sequencing projects and analyses. We have observed high-quality DNA from the Central Biorepository with well-tracked sample management systems.."- Cristen Willer, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Internal Medicine

Cardiovascular Health Improvement Project

CHIP aims to learn more about individuals with aortic diseases
and other cardiovascular-related conditions through collecting and
analyzing biospecimens and clinical data from patients. By doing
this, the team can learn more about the genetics behind cardiovascular
disease, provide information to clinicians to facilitate precision medicine
initiatives, and develop prevention strategies to delay disease onset.

Learn more

View the full study sheet

 

Questions?

Contact us at CBR.Requests@umich.edu or (734) 647-8809 

North Campus Research Complex, Building 60-1660, 2800 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48105

A list of Central Biorepository contacts is available in the Personnel Directory