NCI launches a
pilot of its Community Cancer Centers Program to
bring quality cancer care to all
The National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), today
launched the three-year pilot phase of a new
program that will help bring state-of-the-art
cancer care to patients in community hospitals
across the United States.
The National Cancer Institute Community Cancer
Centers Program (NCCCP) is designed to encourage
the collaboration of private-practice medical,
surgical, and radiation oncologists — with close
links to NCI research and to the network of 63
NCI-designated Cancer Centers principally based
at large research universities. Building on this
expanded network, the NCCCP sites will explore
ways of sharing information, via electronic
medical records, to further enhance patient
care.
Evidence from a wide range of studies suggests
that cancer patients diagnosed and treated in a
setting of coordinated multi-specialty care and
clinical research may live longer and have a
better quality of life.
“Improving access to cutting-edge therapies, and
providing simple and secure methods of
exchanging medical information between health
care consumers and providers are key issues,”
said Health and Human Services Secretary Mike
Leavitt. “The NCCCP pilot program holds great
potential to inform us of the best ways to
expand the reach of clinical research and
further the important adoption of electronic
medical records at the community level.”
The pilot program will research new and
enhanced ways to assist, educate, and better
treat the needs of underserved populations —
including elderly, rural, inner-city, and
low-income patients — as well as racial and
ethnic groups with unusually high cancer
rates.
“A key component of the NCI Community Cancer
Centers program will be education,” said NIH
Director Elias A. Zerhouni, MD. “Studying new
ways to help patients and members of the
community better understand the lifestyle issues
that affect cancer risk could pay dividends for
many diseases by implementing approaches proven
effective by NCI’s research.”
The pilot will begin at eight free-standing
community hospitals and six additional hospitals
operated by health care systems. The sites will
be funded for a collective total of $5 million
per year. An NCI panel of experts and an
independent group of outside experts will set
milestones, monitor progress, and evaluate
success of the three-year pilot and then issue
recommendations for a full-fledged program.
The hospitals, their locations, and their cancer
centers are:
Billings Clinic, Billings, Mont. (Billings
Clinic Cancer Center)
Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. (Helen &
Harry Gray Cancer Center)
St. Joseph’s / Candler, Savannah, Ga. (Nancy N.
and J.C. Lewis Cancer & Research Pavilion)
Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center,
Baton Rouge, La. (Our Lady of the Lake Cancer
Center and Mary Bird Perkins Cancer Center)
Sanford USD Medical Center, Sioux Falls, S.D.
(Sanford Cancer Center)
Spartanburg Regional Hospital, Spartanburg,
S.C., (Gibbs Regional Cancer Center)
St. Joseph Hospital, Orange, Calif. (St. Joseph
Hospital Cancer Center)
Christiana Hospital, Newark, Del. (Helen F.
Graham Cancer Center at Christiana Care)
Ascension Health of St. Louis, Mo.
St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, Indianapolis,
Ind. (St. Vincent Oncology Center)
Columbia St. Mary’s, Milwaukee, Wis. (Columbia
St. Mary’s Cancer Center)
Brackenridge Hospital, Austin, Texas (Shivers
Center)
Catholic Health Initiatives of Denver, Colo.,
will operate sites at:
Penrose-St. Francis Health Services, Colorado
Springs, Colo. (Penrose Cancer Center)
St. Joseph Medical Center, Towson , Md. (St.
Joseph Cancer Institute)
A coordinated regional program in Nebraska
sponsored by Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney
(Good Samaritan Cancer Center); St. Elizabeth
Regional Medical Center in Lincoln (St.
Elizabeth Cancer Center); and St. Francis
Medical Center in Grand Island (St. Francis
Cancer Treatment Center).
NCCCP pilot sites will study how community
hospitals nationwide could most effectively
develop and implement a national database of
voluntarily provided electronic medical records
that would be accessible to cancer researchers.
They will also study methods of expanding and
standardizing the collection of blood and tissue
specimens voluntarily obtained from patients for
cancer research.
“It is becoming clear that one of the greatest
determinants of cancer mortality in the years
ahead will be access to care,” said NCI Director
John E. Niederhuber, M.D. “This program will
succeed if it can bring the benefits of our
latest science to people in the communities
where they live.”
For a Q&A on the NCCCP, please go to
http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/pressreleases/NCCCPpilotQ&A.
For more information on the NCCCP program,
please visit the NCCCP website at
http://ncccp.cancer.gov.
For more information about cancer, please visit
the NCI website at
http://www.cancer.gov, or call NCI's
Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER
(1-800-422-6237).
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) —
The Nation's Medical Research Agency
— includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services. It is the primary federal agency
for conducting and supporting basic, clinical
and translational medical research, and it
investigates the causes, treatments, and cures
for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit
www.nih.gov.