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UNC-Chapel Hill, ECU team up on Cancer care,
research
Newswise — The University of North Carolina’s two medical schools
and their cancer centers have signed a
memorandum of understanding that creates a
partnership to advance cancer research and
bring leading-edge treatment to North
Carolinians.
Officials at East Carolina University’s Brody School of Medicine
and its Leo W. Jenkins Cancer Center, the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill’s School of Medicine and its Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
and the UNC system signed a memorandum of
understanding in December outlining basic
aspects of an arrangement where they will
work together to improve cancer care for
North Carolinians and further research into
the state’s leading cause of death.
“Service to North Carolina is a key part of the University’s
mission, and this new partnership involving
our two highly respected medical schools
will help us advance and expand how we care
for cancer patients, train physicians and
conduct collaborative research that benefits
our citizens,” said UNC President Erskine
Bowles.
“Working together, medical faculty and scientists at ECU and UNC-Chapel
Hill can accomplish far more than they could
individually. This is truly a case where two
plus two can equal five.”
ECU Chancellor Steve Ballard said the agreement with Lineberger
“represents another significant partnership
in medical education with UNC-Chapel Hill.
It will be important to the Leo Jenkins
Cancer Center, to the Brody School of
Medicine at ECU, and, most importantly, to
the citizens of North Carolina.”
“This partnership exemplifies the role of top public medical
schools to serve patients with leading-edge
research and care. North Carolina’s two
public medical schools and their cancer
centers can offer more services for more
people as a result of this collaboration,”
said UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor James Moeser.
The two cancer centers already work together in some areas, said
Dr. Adam Asch, associate director of the
Jenkins Cancer Center.
For example, oncology fellows at ECU travel to Chapel Hill to study
bone marrow transplantation. Areas where the
institutions might further cooperate include
opening a clinic at ECU for pre- and
post-transplant patients, expanding clinical
trials to provide access and accrual to
patients at both centers, giving ECU faculty
members access to Lineberger facilities and
research projects, and cancer survivorship.
Dr. Shelton Earp, UNC Lineberger director and professor of medicine
and pharmacology, explained, “This important
partnership will strengthen cancer research
and care by creating an increased flow of
ideas, clinical trials, prevention strategy
projects, training opportunities and
technologic advancements between our two
institutions. Both our faculties and our
patients will benefit.”
In 2006, cancer passed heart disease as the leading cause of death
in North Carolina. The American Cancer
Society estimated that in 2007 more than
34,000 North Carolinians were diagnosed with
cancer and that close to 17,000 would die
from their disease.