Skip to main content
HHS Logo U.S. Department of Health & Human Services NIH logo National Institutes of Health

Tissue Chip for Drug Screening

a heart on a tissue chip
Pain-on-a-Chip Funding Opportunity

As part of the NIH HEAL InitiativeSM, NCATS seeks applications from investigators to create and test human tissue chip devices that can model pain, addiction, or opioid use disorders.

An astronaut holds a kidney tissue chip.
NIH-Funded Tissue Chips Rocket to International Space Station

The first of several sets of NCATS tissue chips launch into space. Researchers will explore the effects of microgravity on the human immune system.

About Tissue Chip

Read more about the Tissue Chip program and its goal to create 3-D organs-on-chips for drug safety and efficacy testing.

Tissue Chip Funding Information

Find more information about how the Tissue Chip program funds innovative research.

Meet Chip

Chip can help you learn about the innovative developments of the Tissue Chip for Drug Screening program at NCATS. Click on Chip's icons to learn more about the tissues and organ systems they represent, and read more about the entire project.

About Tissue Chip

Read more about the Tissue Chip program and its goal to create 3-D organs-on-chips for drug safety and efficacy testing.

Tissue Chip Funding Information

Find more information about how the Tissue Chip program funds innovative research.

Meet Chip

Chip can help you learn about the innovative developments of the Tissue Chip for Drug Screening program at NCATS. Click on Chip's icons to learn more about the tissues and organ systems they represent, and read more about the entire project.

Work With Us

The Tissue Chip for Drug Screening program is designed to improve the way new drugs are developed and tested. Learn more about how you can join this effort.

Contact Danilo Tagle, Ph.D.

Why Tissue Chips Matter

Approximately 30 percent of promising medications have failed in human clinical trials because they are determined to be toxic — despite promising pre-clinical studies in animal and cell models. Tissue chips are a newer, human cell–based approach to this challenge. The chip devices may enable scientists to predict more accurately how effective a therapeutic candidate would be in clinical studies.

Eliminating toxic and/or ineffective drugs earlier in the development process would save time and money. These human tissue chips also could teach us a great deal about disease progression, enabling researchers to better prevent, diagnose and treat disorders. Learn more about the Tissue Chip for Drug Screening program.

Watch the Tissue Chip for Drug Screening video to learn more about the program. The media player works best when viewed in Chrome or Internet Explorer browsers.

Tissue Chip Facts

Download the Tissue Chip fact sheet (PDF - 337KB).