NCI Cancer Bulletin: A Trusted Source for Cancer Research News
NCI Cancer Bulletin: A Trusted Source for Cancer Research News
February 24, 2004 • Volume 1 / Number 8 E-Mail This Document  |  View PDF Version  |  Bulletin Archive/Search  |  Subscribe


Bulletin Home

Featured Article
CCSG Guidelines

Director's Update
Molecular Epidemiology

Cancer Research Highlights
Recombinant Toxic Antibody Shows Promise against Cancers

Gene May Prove Significant Target for Treating Multiple Myeloma

Regular Aspirin Use May Lower Hodgkin's Risk

Legislative Update
Congressional Briefing on the NCI SEER Program

Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003

Intellectual Property Protection and Collaborative Research

Special Report
Integrative Cancer Biology Program: Tackling Cancer's Complexity

Featured Clinical Trial

Notes
Berg Joins Division of Cancer Prevention

von Eschenbach Updates NCAB

NCI Launches caBIG

Aziz Honored for Advancing Survivorship Research

Featured Meetings

Bulletin Archive

Page Options
Print This Page  Print This Page
Print This Document  Print This Document
View Entire Document  View Entire Document
E-Mail This Document  E-Mail This Document
PDF Version  View/Print PDF
Featured Article

CCSG Guidelines to Build on Working Group Recommendations

During a Feb. 18 meeting of the National Cancer Advisory Board's (NCAB's) Subcommittee on Cancer Centers, National Cancer Institute (NCI) officials presented a status report on Cancer Center Support Grant (CCSG) issues, including draft revisions to the CCSG guidelines. The report follows recommendations for improving the award mechanisms that fund NCI-designated cancer centers (P30 grants) and Specialized Programs of Research Excellence, or SPOREs, (P50 grants) developed by a subcommittee ad hoc working group. Dr. Karen Antman, on an intergovernmental personnel appointment to assist NCI in implementing the working group's recommendations, and Dr. Linda Weiss, chief of the NCI Cancer Centers Branch, gave the report.

As recommended, several operational changes are in the works to increase center leaders' involvement in strategic planning. The working group also recommended that cancer centers be used for piloting new research and dissemination programs, something that Dr. Antman stressed is already underway. More than 50 cancer centers, for example, are participating in the development of the cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG) initiative, and many others have received U54 awards to form partnerships with institutions that serve a large minority population. In 2003, nearly $21 million in awards were made to cancer centers for innovative programs like these, she said.  Read more  

Director's Update

Molecular Epidemiology: A Time for Strategic Partnerships

Epidemiology has been depicted as a scientific approach that moves slowly, but with great force. However, by incorporating the powerful new tools being generated by recent advances in genomics and molecular sciences, epidemiology has an unparalleled opportunity to move more quickly and with greater force than ever. To foster this approach, NCI has designated "molecular epidemiology" as a strategic priority area to meet the director's 2015 challenge goal. Poised to accelerate knowledge about the genetic and environmental components of cancer induction and progression, it will also help identify new preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic interventions.

An integral feature of this initiative is the planning and development of strategic partnerships that link epidemiologists with one another and with genomicists and other investigators from the clinical, basic, and population sciences. This transdisciplinary team-based approach responds to a growing consensus in the scientific community that the full potential of genomic and other emerging technologies will require large-scale epidemiologic studies.  Read more  

This NCI Cancer Bulletin is produced by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). NCI, which was established in 1937, leads a national effort to eliminate the suffering and death due to cancer. Through basic and clinical biomedical research and training, NCI conducts and supports research that will lead to a future in which we can prevent cancer before it starts, identify cancers that do develop at the earliest stage, eliminate cancers through innovative treatment interventions, and biologically control those cancers that we cannot eliminate so they become manageable, chronic diseases.

For more information on cancer, call 1-800-4-CANCER or visit http://www.cancer.gov.

NCI Cancer Bulletin staff can be reached at ncicancerbulletin@mail.nih.gov.

Next Section >


A Service of the National Cancer Institute
Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health USA.gov