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Children's Oncology Group Chair's Grant

$3,476,591U10FY2005CANIH

National Childhood Cancer Foundation, Arcadia CA

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT02883049Trial NCT02402244Trial NCT02306161Trial NCT02180867Trial NCT02176967Trial NCT02112916Trial NCT02101853Trial NCT02097238Trial NCT02097134Trial NCT02017964Trial NCT02011126Trial NCT01979536Trial NCT01876303Trial NCT01824693Trial NCT01798004Trial NCT01767194Trial NCT01614795Trial NCT01602666Trial NCT01556256Trial NCT01553149Trial NCT01502410Trial NCT01462695Trial NCT01407744Trial NCT01371981Trial NCT01358617Trial NCT01334515Trial NCT01236560Trial NCT01231906Trial NCT01222715Trial NCT01217437Trial NCT01190943Trial NCT01190930Trial NCT01189266Trial NCT01175356Trial NCT01154816Trial NCT01149096Trial NCT01142427Trial NCT01119560Trial NCT01118078Trial NCT01096368Trial NCT01076569Trial NCT01055314Trial NCT01041638Trial NCT01026220Trial NCT01005277Trial NCT01000753Trial NCT00980460Trial NCT00959283Trial NCT00954473Trial NCT00945009Trial NCT00919750Trial NCT00904241Trial NCT00900250Trial NCT00899990Trial NCT00899275Trial NCT00898755Trial NCT00898365Trial NCT00898079Trial NCT00898053Trial NCT00897637Trial NCT00897507Trial NCT00897325Trial NCT00873093Trial NCT00866918Trial NCT00866307Trial NCT00831844Trial NCT00772200Trial NCT00736749Trial NCT00720109Trial NCT00690469Trial NCT00679354Trial NCT00674193Trial NCT00671034Trial NCT00666588Trial NCT00653068Trial NCT00618813Trial NCT00567567Trial NCT00557193Trial NCT00554788Trial NCT00537030Trial NCT00516295Trial NCT00482352Trial NCT00467051Trial NCT00450450Trial NCT00445718Trial NCT00437060Trial NCT00436852Trial NCT00408005Trial NCT00392327Trial NCT00387790Trial NCT00382109Trial NCT00381940Trial NCT00381680Trial NCT00379340Trial NCT00369317Trial NCT00354835Trial NCT00354107Trial NCT00352534Trial NCT00346164Trial NCT00336024

Abstract

The Children's Oncology Group (COG) is a new multidisciplinary clinical trials group resulting from the unification of the four pediatric cooperative groups. It is the largest childhood cancer research organization in the world and encompasses approximately 238 pediatric cancer programs as clinical trial sites throughout all of North America, Australia, and several institutions in Europe. It is exclusively well poised to translate basic biology studies into clinical investigations and to develop translational approaches through human proof of principle, toxicity assessment, identification of efficacy, and ultimately, incorporation into established treatments to improve outcome and/or decrease toxicity. COG represents the legacy of four groups, the oldest of which existed for nearly 50 years. Currently, 48,259 patients accrued to clinical trials are in active follow-up; over 2,500,000 person years of life have been saved. Although childhood cancer mortality has decreased by 50% in the last two decades and by 25% inthe past decade, nearly 2,500 children and adolescents die from cancer annually inthe U.S. alone. The majority of these deaths can be attributed to specific pediatric cancers for which new therapeutic approaches must be devised. Improvement in the cure rates for these high-risk cancers is more likely to emerge as a result of the identification of biologic features which predict resistance and, more importantly, by the identification of new anti-cancer agents with novel mechanisms of action, whose efficacy might be predicted on the basis of specific unique molecular abnormalities detected in cancer cells. COG is also uniquely able to establish for the first time a North America-wide population-based registry of childhood cancer to investigate, utilizing case control studies, potential epidemiologic associations, including genetic alterations and ultimately interactions of genes with the environment. COG, through a series of hypothesis-driven research studies, seeks to maximize cure rates for children with cancer; to achieve an expanded understanding of tumor and host biology; to elucidate new therapeutic strategies and to build on the concept of risk-adjusted therapy; and to reduce treatment-related toxicity and morbidity, thereby optimize quality of life and survival.The proposed research is aimed at reducing deaths from childhood cancer by 20% and increasing 5-year disease-free survival (cure) rates to >85% during the study period.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →