# 06 Prevention and Control Program

> **NIH NIH P30** · WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY · 2021 · $63,301

## Abstract

PREVENTION AND CONTROL PROGRAM (PCP): PROJECT SUMMARY
Cancer continues to pose a major threat to public health nationally and in the Siteman Cancer Center (SCC)
catchment area. The pioneering transdisciplinary and translational research within the SCC Prevention and
Control Program (PCP) is aimed at reducing the cancer burden and spans from prevention to early detection
through survival. Adding to the robust depth and breadth of PCP expertise, research within the program spans
from the cell to society and includes basic science, large data analytics, clinical and community-based
intervention and implementation research, as well as policy research in clinical and community settings.
 Building on PCP’s impactful and practice-changing research from the past five years and based on key needs
in the SCC catchment and beyond, the PCP will address the following specific aims:
 Aim 1. Reduce the impact of tobacco use and resultant cancers by conducting research across the
 continuum, from prevention to detection and cessation.
 Aim 2. Reduce cancer health disparities through rigorous research in cancer prevention and control.
 Aim 3. Advance dissemination and implementation science methods to reduce the cancer burden.
 PCP’s research priorities are responsive to and reflective of the catchment area. Cigarette smoking rates are
above average in our catchment; lung cancer rates are above the national average. Our catchment includes
racial/ethnic, geographic, and socioeconomic diversity, and within this diversity are disparities in cancer
screening, detection, and survival. Similar to the rest of the nation, we observe delays in the implementation of
evidence-based practice across many settings. Our unique and diverse catchment includes parts of Missouri,
which has the lowest cigarette taxes in the nation and lacks Medicaid expansion, and parts of Illinois, which has
a more stringent cigarette policy and expanded Medicaid. Together this results in a microcosm in which to study
tobacco use, cancer disparities, and implementation science.
 PCP membership includes experts in diverse disciplines such as psychology, epidemiology, biostatistics,
economics, public health, clinical medicine, and basic science. The program has 38 members from eight
departments and two schools at Washington University. The PCP is supported by $8.3 million in funding, of
which $5.1M is from NCI and $2.4M is other cancer-focused peer-reviewed. In the current project period, PCP
members published 1,096 manuscripts, of which 25% and 25% represent inter- and intra-programmatic
collaborations, respectively. In 2018, the PCP had 7,355 total enrollments into clinical studies, of which 38%
were interventional. Forty percent of the interventional enrollments represented racial and ethnic minority
participants. With these assets and this record of past achievement, the PCP is poised to make substantial
impacts on public health and clinical practices and policies related to cancer control that w...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10217020
- **Project number:** 5P30CA091842-20
- **Recipient organization:** WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** TIMOTHY J. EBERLEIN
- **Activity code:** P30 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $63,301
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2001-08-02 → 2025-06-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10217020

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10217020, 06 Prevention and Control Program (5P30CA091842-20). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10217020. Licensed CC0.

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