The Protocol Review and Monitoring Committee (PRMC) was established in 1991 at UHC. In July 2004, a joint PRMC comprised of 49 members (31 from Case/UHC;16 from CCF/CCLCM;and 2 patient advocates) from the partner institutions of the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center was implemented, in which all cancer protocols are reviewed in partnership for scientific merit and prioritization. The PRMC serves as the focal point for the assessment of all new therapeutic clinical trials at the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center by providing protocol review (and associated feedback to assist protocol development), and scientific monitoring. The Committee considers new concepts [letters of intent (LOIs)] submitted by individual investigators, reviews new protocols and amendments, receives adverse events and clinical responses, and monitors the scientific progress of active studies. While the emphasis is on the development, review, and approval of investigator-initiated clinical trials and protocol concepts, all therapeutic trials are reviewed by this committee including NCI-sponsored (e.g., R21, R01 and U01/N01), cooperative group (e.g., ECOG, SWOG, RTOG, NSABP, GOG and others), pharmaceutical, and multi-institutional consortium studies. The PRMC also reviews behavioral and observational trials on cancer patients. Institutional commitment to this charge is indicated by a directive from both UHC and CCF Chiefs of Staff, that all clinical trials for patients with cancer be reviewed by this Committee prior to review by the Case Cancer IRB. The PRMC does not engage in primary safety monitoring or auditing of data. However, it does receive data safety and toxicity reports, clinical response reports, and quality assurance reports generated by: (1) the Clinical Trials Unit (CTU) audit systems and other audit reports (e.g., NCI, cooperative group, pharmaceutical sponsor);(2) the Patient Protocol Review Committees for Phase I trials (Dr. Dowlati, Chair), and the stem cell therapies and acute leukemia trials (Dr. Laughlin, Chair);and (3) the Cancer Center Data Safety and Toxicity Committee (DSTC, Dr. B. Cooper, Chair). The Committee also closely interacts with Clinical Trials Disease Teams, where initial pre-review for all therapeutic trials is undertaken. The teams provide pre-review by experts in their field for scientific merit, prioritization, and intent to accrue patients. Interactive Clinical Trials Disease Teams with respective co-leaders at each partner institution were established by the Cancer Center for directing the clinical trials research agenda for each team. The co-leaders are charged with setting a single research agenda, identifying new studies for activation, and making recommendations to the PRMC. The senior leadership identified this as an important strategy to build advocacy for any given trial at the physician-investigator level and to charge the teams with driving their respective trials agenda in order to grow the partnership. This strategy was fully endorsed by our external advisors. The Committee is comprised of clinical investigators in all cancer modalities, laboratory scientists, biostatisticians, and patient advocates. CCSG support for a total of 1.10 FTE is requested for the Chair (Dr. Sagar, 0.025 FTE), the 3 co-chairs (Drs. Budd, Lazarus and Waggoner, each at 0.025 FTE), and the Administrative Director (Ms. Naser, 1.0 FTE). Recommendations for scientific merit and priority for accrual are directly communicated to the Case Cancer IRB

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30CA043703-21
Application #
8103102
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2010-04-01
Budget End
2011-03-31
Support Year
21
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$297,208
Indirect Cost
Name
Case Western Reserve University
Department
Type
DUNS #
077758407
City
Cleveland
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
44106
Cummings III, Kenneth C; Zimmerman, Nicole M; Maheshwari, Kamal et al. (2018) Epidural compared with non-epidural analgesia and cardiopulmonary complications after colectomy: A retrospective cohort study of 20,880 patients using a national quality database. J Clin Anesth 47:12-18
Thiagarajan, Praveena S; Sinyuk, Maksim; Turaga, Soumya M et al. (2018) Cx26 drives self-renewal in triple-negative breast cancer via interaction with NANOG and focal adhesion kinase. Nat Commun 9:578
Qiu, Zhaojun; Oleinick, Nancy L; Zhang, Junran (2018) ATR/CHK1 inhibitors and cancer therapy. Radiother Oncol 126:450-464
Elitt, Matthew S; Shick, H Elizabeth; Madhavan, Mayur et al. (2018) Chemical Screening Identifies Enhancers of Mutant Oligodendrocyte Survival and Unmasks a Distinct Pathological Phase in Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease. Stem Cell Reports 11:711-726
He, Tian; McColl, Karen; Sakre, Nneha et al. (2018) Post-transcriptional regulation of PIAS3 expression by miR-18a in malignant mesothelioma. Mol Oncol 12:2124-2135
Roche, Kathryn L; Nukui, Masatoshi; Krishna, Benjamin A et al. (2018) Selective 4-Thiouracil Labeling of RNA Transcripts within Latently Infected Cells after Infection with Human Cytomegalovirus Expressing Functional Uracil Phosphoribosyltransferase. J Virol 92:
Bedell, Hillary W; Hermann, John K; Ravikumar, Madhumitha et al. (2018) Targeting CD14 on blood derived cells improves intracortical microelectrode performance. Biomaterials 163:163-173
Nagaraj, A B; Wang, Q Q; Joseph, P et al. (2018) Using a novel computational drug-repositioning approach (DrugPredict) to rapidly identify potent drug candidates for cancer treatment. Oncogene 37:403-414
Somasegar, Sahana; Li, Li; Thompson, Cheryl L (2018) No association of reproductive risk factors with breast cancer tumor grade. Eur J Cancer Prev 27:140-143
Gu, Xiaorong; Ebrahem, Quteba; Mahfouz, Reda Z et al. (2018) Leukemogenic nucleophosmin mutation disrupts the transcription factor hub that regulates granulomonocytic fates. J Clin Invest 128:4260-4279

Showing the most recent 10 out of 1227 publications