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Molecular Carcinogenesis and Chemoprevention Research Program (MCC)

$2,399P30FY2018CANIH

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

PROJECT-004: MOLECULAR CARCINOGENESIS AND CHEMOPREVENTION PROGRAM (MCC) PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT The Molecular Carcinogenesis and Chemoprevention (MCC) Program, led by Steven K. Clinton, MD, PhD, has a collaborative team of 37 basic, translational and clinical scientists. These faculty have appointments in 17 Departments/Divisions within the Colleges of Medicine, Arts and Sciences, Pharmacy, Food Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, Public Health, Dentistry, Education and Human Ecology and Veterinary Medicine. The Specific Aims of the MCC Program are: 1) to characterize molecular and cellular changes induced by chemical, physical, hormonal and infectious agents that contribute to neoplastic transformation and multistage carcinogenesis in experimental models and humans; 2) to develop and characterize novel agents for cancer chemoprevention and define their efficacy, safety, and mechanisms of action using in vitro and preclinical models; and 3) to identify dietary and nutritional components that may enhance or inhibit the carcinogenesis cascade across the continuum of cancer progression. Each of these aims results in translational prevention studies in human populations with an emphasis on those at risk due to exposure to carcinogenic or cancer promoting agents, familial and genetic predisposition, or due to the presence of premalignant lesions. The MCC Program's overarching goals, implemented through multiple MCC initiatives, are to accelerate the research objectives of each Aim through incentivizing and stimulating collaborative investigation among MCC members, other investigators of the OSUCCC as well as facilitating the implementation of translational studies of cancer etiology, prevention, and progression in human trials. The MCC enhances quality by promoting knowledge of and utilization of state-of-the-art technologies provided by the OSUCCC shared resources (members utilize 14/14 shared resources). The MCC Program, during its previous review (2004-2009) was graded as ?Outstanding to Exceptional?. During this funding period (2009-2014), MCC Program members published 484 cancer relevant peer-reviewed articles in top tier journals for the respective fields of carcinogenesis, chemoprevention, and nutrition. Collaboration is extensive with 28% intra-programmatic publications and 55% inter-programmatic publications, with 272 or 56% being multi-institutional and 447 or 92% being collaborative publications. Peer-reviewed funding for the MCC Program is $5.19M in annual direct costs with $2.9M (56%) from the NCI. Translational research has been robust as well with 20 human trials led by MCC members employing the OSUCCC Clinical Trials Office resulting in 360 interventional accruals during the last funding cycle, 72% of which were from investigator-initiated Phase I and II trials. The current MCC Program uniquely integrates investigators across disciplines yet with shared interests focusing upon the interactive themes of carcinogenesis, chemoprevention, and nutrition. Our future goals include the integration of new initiatives involving the microbiome and metabolomics, two areas benefiting from rapid growth in technology and bioinformatics that will dramatically impact our understanding of carcinogenesis and strategies for cancer prevention.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →