The researchers receive nearly $ 3.6 million to create new national clinical trials network -
A team of researchers, doctors at Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at the University of Utah (U of U) has received nearly $ 3.6 million over the next five years in a cooperative agreement with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish a charge of academic network participant website (NLAPS). The price puts HCI in an elite group of only 30 to 40 NLAPS locations nationwide; these sites are part of the NIH effort to create a new National Clinical Trials Network (NCTN).
"We are confident that HCl can be an important asset to help update the national NIH clinical trial program," said David Gaffney, MD, PhD, principal investigator. Gaffney is vice president, medical director and professor of radiation oncology at the University of U School of Medicine and an HCI investigator. "HCI will provide scientific leadership in the development and implementation of clinical trials, and access to clinical trials for patients throughout our service area in the Intermountain West five states.
"HCI strives to provide a wide range of important clinical trials for our patients. We give our world-class patient care and are working to improve cancer treatment in the future, "Gaffney said.
The NCTN will transform, consolidate and integrate the efforts of the previous National Cancer Institute (NCI) clinical trials Group of cooperation. the objectives of the new network include the development of multi-institutional clinical trials to evaluate new therapies against cancer through a wide range of people and types of cancer.
HCl, a cancer center NCI-designated, will be a key partner in the NCTN research cooperative group, according to Gaffney. "We have a successful clinical trial infrastructure already in place, and we have active research unique, including a center for NCI quantitative Imaging excellence and the Utah population database, "said Gaffney.
"Furthermore, we have several experts in all areas of cancer medicine, and our doctors and scientists to adopt a team approach to improve cancer care," said Gaffney.
HCI Center for quantitative imaging provides cancer researchers, clinicians and patients with the most advanced cancer imaging technologies, allowing the search for the best quality, disease diagnosis and monitoring therapy. the database Utah population is a powerful resource genealogical data based on the population that in many cases extends 15 generations, in connection with the scale cancer State and medical records.
"HCI is proud to direct those resources to the success of a cooperative NTCN efforts to eradicate cancer," said Gaffney.
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