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Cancer Center Support Grant

$2,309,270P30FY2019CANIH

Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem NC

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07614022Trial NCT07324577Trial NCT07322367Trial NCT07282444Trial NCT07203534Trial NCT07196241Trial NCT07175376Trial NCT07119489Trial NCT07046936Trial NCT06945042Trial NCT06709404Trial NCT06654245Trial NCT06480591Trial NCT06441266Trial NCT06340503Trial NCT05984680Trial NCT05934851Trial NCT05877404Trial NCT05854966Trial NCT05825066Trial NCT05796518Trial NCT05696782Trial NCT05692635Trial NCT05597878Trial NCT05395936Trial NCT05309655Trial NCT05242770Trial NCT05212272Trial NCT05204290Trial NCT05030038Trial NCT04897217Trial NCT04858269Trial NCT04797884Trial NCT04677816Trial NCT04659993Trial NCT04623515Trial NCT04586127Trial NCT04526080Trial NCT04495751Trial NCT04485026Trial NCT04454489Trial NCT04430335Trial NCT04415944Trial NCT04375384Trial NCT04337580Trial NCT04327700Trial NCT04266470Trial NCT04253964Trial NCT04217317Trial NCT04174742Trial NCT04173247Trial NCT04111107Trial NCT04040244Trial NCT04037527Trial NCT03998189Trial NCT03987568Trial NCT03987555Trial NCT03982537Trial NCT03963739Trial NCT03958747Trial NCT03929211Trial NCT03890614Trial NCT03880526Trial NCT03874065Trial NCT03870529Trial NCT03870451Trial NCT03868943Trial NCT03867175Trial NCT03861091Trial NCT03861065Trial NCT03796273Trial NCT03746262Trial NCT03741868Trial NCT03741829Trial NCT03740035Trial NCT03681405Trial NCT03662074Trial NCT03529565Trial NCT03520283Trial NCT03505762Trial NCT03505736Trial NCT03505671Trial NCT03379376Trial NCT03374995Trial NCT03370159Trial NCT03188432Trial NCT03152786Trial NCT03148080Trial NCT03139435Trial NCT03122743Trial NCT03087591Trial NCT03032250Trial NCT02971410Trial NCT02971397Trial NCT02949843Trial NCT02835222Trial NCT02835066Trial NCT02832154Trial NCT02827838Trial NCT02747407

Abstract

Project Summary Over the past 5 years, the Wake Forest Baptist Comprehensive Cancer Center (WFBCCC) has continued its upward trajectory in cancer research excellence and service to its catchment area. The WFBCCC catchment area includes the Piedmont and southern Appalachia, a region of 58 contiguous counties in North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia and Tennessee. The majority of this region is rural and exhibits significant racial health disparities. Elevated age-adjusted smoking rates, obesity rates, cancer incidence, and cancer mortality are observed across the WFBCCC catchment area when compared with the rest of the U.S. To target these issues, the WFBCCC conducts cutting-edge basic, clinical, and population research on the prevention, detection and treatment of cancer, and translates this knowledge into strategies to improve patient outcomes and reduce the incidence of cancer. WFBCCC cancer research funding is $37.9 million, of which over $14.9 million comes from the NCI; this represents a 25.3% increase in total cancer funding since the last CCSG renewal. Center research space under the Director?s authority increased by approximately 65,000 square feet, and the WFBCCC clinical facilities have been dramatically enhanced with the completion of the new eleven- story Cancer Hospital in 2013. This building houses all oncology inpatients and outpatients. The Center?s 127 members span the basic, clinical and population sciences and are organized into 4 Programs with substantial inter-and intra-programmatic productivity. Faculty additions enhanced tobacco control, tobacco-related cancer research, and precision medicine. Substantial investment in faculty, technology, and informatics significantly expanded cancer genomics capabilities. Enrollment of patients into treatment trials reached an all-time high in 2015, with a large increase in the number of patients enrolled in investigator-initiated trials. WFBCCC population scientists initiated exciting new efforts in cancer prevention and survivorship. Clinical scientists completed practice-changing studies in patients with glioma and lung cancer. Groundbreaking observations in prostate cancer emerged from WFBCCC inter-programmatic collaborations. WFBCCC basic science Programs continued to make high impact observations that are being translated into human therapeutics. The WFBCCC requests continued CCSG funding for 4 scientific Programs; 7 Shared Resources; 2 clinical research components; administration and leadership; planning and evaluation; and developmental funds. With these funds, a talented faculty integrated throughout the Cancer Center will make advances in the prevention, early detection, and treatment of cancer in the WFBCCC catchment area and the nation.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →