Strong ties have developed between investigators at Long Island University's Brooklyn campus (LIU) and Columbia University's Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC) over the past four years. Several joint grants and projects have resulted, totaling over $2 million, with two proposals pending. Anchoring this collaboration has been a P20 from NCI (CA91372). These research efforts have focused on differences among African Caribbean immigrant populations in Brooklyn and North Manhattan (including Dominican, Haitian, and English-speaking Caribbeans) and US-born African Americans and European Americans. The research includes behavioral, cultural, lifestyle, and biological genetic differences that may relate to cancer-related health disparities. In this application, we propose to build upon the existing partnership and use it as a platform for a broader, more comprehensive study of the same issues. This partnership would meld the two institutions, with an emphasis on bringing together their complementary strengths. The PI at LIU is a well-known psychologist with extensive behavioral and survey research experience with these populations in Brooklyn. The PI at Columbia is a medical oncologist and epidemiologist with a strong record in cancer prevention and control research and a leadership position in the MCCC. HICCC will provide access to its core facilities, especially the Biostatistics Core, while LlU will provide its expertise in survey and behavioral research. The proximity of the two institutions will permit frequent seminars and workshops attended by individuals from both centers, as well as an annual retreat at each center. Students and faculty at each will also have access to courses and lectures at each of the institutions. Equally important will be programs designed to provide experience for minority students and faculty in cancer research, with the opportunity for students from LIU to obtain admissions and fellowships to Columbia programs, illustrated by a minority predoc from LIU who will have a T32 postdoc at Columbia. Two projects and four pilots are U54 program. There will be an annual competition for funding for the following year; proposals will be reviewed by external reviewers, as was successfully conducted in our P20. Ongoing/proposed projects/pilots will be I discussed at a monthly workshop alternating between campuses at which statisticians, data management, and methodologists will attend to provide constructive discussion. A representative from the University of West Indies (UWI) will attend annual EAB meetings and, via videoconference, quarterly internal steering committee meetings with long-term possibilities for dual site (Brooklyn/Caribbean) projects. This partnership has a unique study population, a successful existing relationship, and an emphasis on population science research.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Specialized Center--Cooperative Agreements (U54)
Project #
5U54CA101388-05
Application #
7282452
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-7 (J1))
Program Officer
Aguila, H Nelson
Project Start
2003-09-26
Project End
2011-08-31
Budget Start
2007-09-11
Budget End
2011-08-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$1,015,118
Indirect Cost
Name
Long Island University Brooklyn Campus
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
618059232
City
Greenvale
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
11548
Consedine, Nathan S (2012) The demographic, system, and psychosocial origins of mammographic screening disparities: prediction of initiation versus maintenance screening among immigrant and non-immigrant women. J Immigr Minor Health 14:570-82
Consedine, Nathan S; Ladwig, Inga; Reddig, Maike K et al. (2011) The many faeces of colorectal cancer screening embarrassment: preliminary psychometric development and links to screening outcome. Br J Health Psychol 16:559-79
Elliott, Natalina E; Cleveland, Susan M; Grann, Victor et al. (2011) FERM domain mutations induce gain of function in JAK3 in adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma. Blood 118:3911-21
Consedine, Nathan S; Reddig, Maike K; Ladwig, Inga et al. (2011) Gender and ethnic differences in colorectal cancer screening embarrassment and physician gender preferences. Oncol Nurs Forum 38:E409-17
Consedine, Nathan S; Adjei, Brenda A; Horton, David et al. (2009) Fear and loathing in the Caribbean: three studies of fear and cancer screening in Brooklyn's immigrant Caribbean subpopulations. Infect Agent Cancer 4 Suppl 1:S14
Grann, Victor R; Ziv, Elad; Joseph, Cecil K et al. (2008) Duffy (Fy), DARC, and neutropenia among women from the United States, Europe and the Caribbean. Br J Haematol 143:288-93
Magai, Carol; Consedine, Nathan S; Adjei, Brenda A et al. (2008) Psychosocial influences on suboptimal adjuvant breast cancer treatment adherence among African American women: implications for education and intervention. Health Educ Behav 35:835-54
Consedine, Nathan S; Adjei, Brenda A; Ramirez, Paul M et al. (2008) An object lesson: source determines the relations that trait anxiety, prostate cancer worry, and screening fear hold with prostate screening frequency. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 17:1631-9
Yaeger, Rona; Avila-Bront, Alexa; Abdul, Kazeem et al. (2008) Comparing genetic ancestry and self-described race in african americans born in the United States and in Africa. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 17:1329-38
Grann, Victor R; Bowman, Natalie; Joseph, Cecil et al. (2008) Neutropenia in 6 ethnic groups from the Caribbean and the U.S. Cancer 113:854-60

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