Research Program: Cancer Risk and Control (CRiC)

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P30 · $58,948 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT: CANCER RISK AND CONTROL PROGRAM (CRiC) The Cancer Risk and Control (CRiC) Program identifies disparities in population-based cancer risk and outcomes, creates behavioral interventions to improve outcomes, and develops implementation strategies to diminish morbidity and mortality from cancer. The CRiC Program’s aims to: 1) Discover the individual, molecular, structural, and community factors that impact cancer risk and outcomes across the cancer continuum; 2) Develop behavioral interventions to mitigate cancer risk and improve cancer outcomes; and 3) Implement programs that positively impact health systems and develop strategies towards improving quality of life in cancer survivors. CRiC members have generated paradigm-shifting findings that have enabled application of scientific advances to the translational pipeline, resulting in changes in public health policy and improved standards of care in the clinical setting. CRiC promotes transdisciplinary research through inter-programmatic collaborations with members in the other three Programs of the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center (SKCC). The scientific findings of CRiC inform interventional studies that address the high incidence and mortality and/or disparity of the top cancers identified in the SKCC strategic plan that is facilitated by partnership with COE. Members are highly engaged in the development of trainees through multiple mechanisms including conference presentations and a minority pipeline research program. The CRiC Program is led by Nicole Simone, MD, and Terry Hyslop, PhD, who provide complementary expertise in behavioral interventions to improve cancer outcomes, and the development of computational frameworks in the study of cancer disparities, respectively. To capture the research strengths across the consortium, the Program assembles 33 members from 15 departments across Thomas Jefferson University and Drexel University. CRiC members have successfully published and obtained grant support. Total cancer relevant funding is $15.2 M with $5 M from NCI and a further $5.8 M from other NIH institutes and DOD. CRiC has published 867 cancer-relevant research articles of which 18% are intra-programmatic, 17.7% are inter- programmatic, and 49.9% are collaborative with other NCI-designated Cancer Centers. Important discoveries have been published in high-impact journals including J Clin Oncol, N Eng J Med, and Lancet Planetary Health. CRiC aims to make an immediate and major impact on population health, quality of life, and survivorship across the catchment area. The CRiC Program’s future directions are aligned to the SKCC strategic plan, IMPACT PHL. Future goals are to: 1) Enhance programmatic approaches into new areas of disparities research; 2) Increase community member-informed research to address catchment area needs; and 3) Recruit members focused on structural racism, disparities, healthcare access, and associated policies.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10848045
Project number
2P30CA056036-24
Recipient
THOMAS JEFFERSON UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Nicole L Simone
Activity code
P30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$58,948
Award type
2
Project period
1995-06-22 → 2029-05-31