Aaron C. Pawlyk, Ph.D., is Chief of the Obstetric and Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics Branch (OPPTB) in the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)’s Division of Extramural Research. OPPTB supports research and training to advance thesafe and effective development and use of therapeutics for pregnant women, lactating women, and children, with an emphasis on clinical pharmacology to improve dosing, safety, and effectiveness.
Since joining NICHD as Branch Chief in August 2019, Dr. Pawlyk has led OPPTB’s national extramural portfolio. He established a five-year strategic plan, expanded intra-NIH and cross-agency collaboration, and advanced data-driven recommendations to strengthen NICHD’s research direction. Heoversees funding mechanisms—including grants, cooperative agreements, contracts, and OTAs—and leads work at the science–policy interface, supporting activities under the Best Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) and guiding PRGLAC follow-up and implementation, including a National Academies study on legal, ethical, and regulatory policy issues for research involving pregnant and lactating women.
Dr. Pawlyk has prioritized strengthening quantitative clinical pharmacology to close evidence gaps. Under his leadership, OPPTB envisioned the Maternal and Pediatric pRecisioN in Therapeutics (MPRINT) Hub, a national resourcespanning quantitative systems pharmacology, pharmacometrics, and tool development. He also developed initiatives focused on mechanisms driving maternal–fetal and pediatric exposure and response across organ systems. In his role as the NIH point of contact for pediatric medical devices, he led OPPTB in launching a design-phase public–private partnership in pediatric medical device innovation via the Foundation for the NIH, in coordination with FDA and BARDA.
Dr. Pawlyk earned a BA in Biochemistry and Biology at the University of Pennsylvania and a PhD in Biochemistry at Texas A&M University, with training in enzymology and allosteric regulation. Prior to NIH, he built expertisein women’s health and biomarker-informed product development at Wyeth and gained experience at Redpoint Bio in how excipients and palatability can affect use in children. Earlier NIH leadership at NIDDK strengthened his focus on data and knowledge resources and translational programs, including coordination of the Common Fund’s Illuminating the Druggable Genome (IDG) program and stewardship of large-scale initiatives coupling multi-omics data and phenotypes to accelerate target discovery and therapeutic translation. Hehas authored 37 peer-reviewed publications and is recognized for building multidisciplinary teams and national-scale resources that connect mechanism, modeling, biomarkers, and implementation.