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Cancer Center Support Grant

$139,874P30FY2017CANIH

Ohio State University, Columbus OH

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT04662645Trial NCT04602026Trial NCT04567706Trial NCT04454086Trial NCT04439006Trial NCT04329962Trial NCT04269837Trial NCT04267874Trial NCT04233567Trial NCT04229381Trial NCT04220684Trial NCT04205903Trial NCT04205240Trial NCT04205071Trial NCT04164069Trial NCT04140513Trial NCT04120454Trial NCT04116970Trial NCT04115163Trial NCT04063410Trial NCT04049539Trial NCT04032106Trial NCT03975231Trial NCT03943342Trial NCT03892044Trial NCT03868423Trial NCT03858855Trial NCT03824327Trial NCT03798639Trial NCT03786354Trial NCT03749018Trial NCT03728361Trial NCT03719092Trial NCT03715959Trial NCT03711890Trial NCT03691350Trial NCT03665675Trial NCT03656835Trial NCT03654638Trial NCT03631641Trial NCT03611205Trial NCT03583424Trial NCT03568526Trial NCT03537599Trial NCT03532581Trial NCT03525925Trial NCT03513562Trial NCT03463460Trial NCT03460483Trial NCT03447808Trial NCT03409432Trial NCT03372720Trial NCT03333746Trial NCT03328936Trial NCT03307044Trial NCT03287453Trial NCT02960100Trial NCT02950220Trial NCT02942524Trial NCT02940301Trial NCT02927899Trial NCT02835755Trial NCT02831582Trial NCT02812693Trial NCT02795104Trial NCT02791737Trial NCT02760030Trial NCT02439255Trial NCT02303392Trial NCT02101944Trial NCT02015117Trial NCT01964924Trial NCT01955499Trial NCT01861314Trial NCT01841723Trial NCT01811212Trial NCT01533194Trial NCT01519414Trial NCT01515176Trial NCT01468896Trial NCT01425879Trial NCT01351896Trial NCT01281124Trial NCT01280058Trial NCT01254617Trial NCT01254578Trial NCT01251874Trial NCT01249430Trial NCT01238133Trial NCT01132586Trial NCT01130506Trial NCT01129193Trial NCT01126502Trial NCT01076556Trial NCT01017640Trial NCT00735930Trial NCT00703300Trial NCT00602277Trial NCT00563290Trial NCT00499473

Abstract

The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center (OSUCCC) is currently in its 39th year as an NCI designated CCC, having received an ?exceptional? overall merit descriptor following its last review in 2010 and now requesting continued federal support for the next five years. Dr. Caligiuri continues in his twelfth year as the OSUCCC Director and his seventh year as CEO of OSU's freestanding James Cancer Hospital. The OSUCCC mission remains to reduce cancer morbidity and mortality through continued basic, translational and clinical research. The 222 OSUCCC full, associate or introductory members are currently served by 14 shared resources and are distributed among our five Research Programs which are: Cancer Control, Translational Therapeutics (formerly Experimental Therapeutics), Molecular Biology and Cancer Genetics, Molecular Carcinogenesis and Chemoprevention and a new Leukemia Research Program. The OSUCCC addresses the public health needs of the catchment area (the state of Ohio) through research and outreach, from etiology through prevention, treatment and survivorship among the major cancers afflicting its population ? lung, colorectal, breast, and prostate. This is done by addressing risky behaviors (tobacco use, obesity, HPV infection and lack of screening) and the higher incidence of and mortality from cancers among the following groups: the poor; the underserved populations of Ohio Appalachia; and inner city African-Americans. Since the last CCSG competitive renewal, the OSUCCC has shown significant growth as demonstrated by: 1) the recruitment of 145 faculty focused in basic, translational and clinical cancer research and cancer medicine, 58 of whom have become OSUCCC members; 2) the addition of 1,326,300 nsf of new space under the full control of the OSUCCC Director at a cost of $1.2 billion and including a new 1.1 million nsf James Cancer Hospital; 3) obtaining a $100M HRSA grant award to construct a state-of-the-art Radiation Oncology Center in the new James Cancer Hospital; 4) a 51% increase in patient accrual to interventional therapeutic trials reflective of robust growth in solid tumor research; 5) the addition of 2 new shared resources at an institutional investment of over $2 million; 6) strong team science as demonstrated by a 12.5% increase in NCI programmatic grant funding (as a fraction of our nearly $45 million in total direct NCI funding); 7) an increase in the mean percent NCI funding proportion to total CCSG funding for our five research programs from 51% to 61%, reflective of increased cancer focus; 8) enhanced collaborative research as demonstrated by a publication portfolio in which 64% of manuscripts are multi-institutional and 84.4% are collaborative (i.e., inter-, intra-programmatic or multi-institutional); and 9) preclinical and clinical development of two agents, one of which changed the landscape in cancer and both of which were subsequently FDA approved. With new recruits and resources in place and building on the momentum of our research work to date, the OSUCCC is poised in these coming five years to take significant steps toward achieving our mission and ultimately our vision of a cancer-free world.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →