The Clinical Research Office (CRO) provides numerous services to faculty and staff conducting oncology research at the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center (SKCCC). The CRO has a key leadership role in the SKCCC research infrastructure, with the CRO Director overseeing and integrating activities among the several Clinical Research Cores. The Program Managers of the seven disease-specific research Programs and the SAC lab Manager have a dual-reporting relationship to both the Research Program Directors and the CRO Manager. This allows for a centralized research infrastructure yet at the same time allows disease-specific Programs flexibility based on the disease(s) being studies. Centralized and integrated CRO electronic resources include (1) a Clinical Research Management System (CRMS) tracking real time accrual to all oncology research studies, (2) a Protocol Library containing all active protocols, consents, order sets, and related documents, (3) a Pharmacy Research Orders Tracking/Approval System (POTS), (4) the Protocol Review and Monitoring System-Clinical Research Review Committee (PRMSCRC) Electronic Forum tracking documents, scientific review comments, and meeting outcomes from the weekly pre-PRMS-CRC (pre-Protocol Review and Monitoring System) and CRC (Protocol Review and Monitoring System) meetings, (5) a Standard Operating Procedures website for housing recommended clinical research methods and procedures, (6) a Regulatory Documents Warehouse to provide centralized access to common regulatory documents including clinical investigator CVs and laboratory certifications, and (7) an external SKCCC Clinical Trials website to facilitate web-based clinical trials searches by the community. Education provided by the CRO includes an introductory research course for all new research staff involved in oncology clinical trials, CRMS training, and continuing research education for research faculty and staff. The CRO provides regulatory expertise regarding FDA regulations and Investigational New Drug (IND) submissions, and internal regulatory oversight and guidance for all investigator-initiated trials. Quality assurance services are an essential component of the CRO via auditing and monitoring and developing standard operating procedures. The CRO acts as a liaison with the Johns Hopkins Institutional Review Boards, outside auditors and regulatory agencies. In 2010, there were 499 active research studies, including 319 therapeutic (354 Intervention) clinical trials. Accruals in 2010 totaled 6,386;including 5,036 to non-intervention studies and 1,350 to intervention trials. Lay: The Clinical Research Office (CRO) provides a centralized infrastructure for the conduct of clinical trials, including formal education programs, regulatory expertise, auditing, and databases such as a Protocol Library;a Clinical Research Management System (CRMS) for tracking enrollment, and a Pharmacy Orders Tracking System (POTS). The CRO plays a key role in integrating activities among the other clinical research cores. SKCCC Managed Shared Resource Current Grant Year Reporting Period: January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2010

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
2P30CA006973-49
Application #
8559535
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Project Start
1997-05-07
Project End
2017-04-30
Budget Start
2012-08-09
Budget End
2013-04-30
Support Year
49
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$613,631
Indirect Cost
$234,847
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Type
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Shrestha, Eva; White, James R; Yu, Shu-Han et al. (2018) Profiling the Urinary Microbiome in Men with Positive versus Negative Biopsies for Prostate Cancer. J Urol 199:161-171
Gordy, James T; Luo, Kun; Francica, Brian et al. (2018) Anti-IL-10-mediated Enhancement of Antitumor Efficacy of a Dendritic Cell-targeting MIP3?-gp100 Vaccine in the B16F10 Mouse Melanoma Model Is Dependent on Type I Interferons. J Immunother 41:181-189
Woodard, Lauren E; Dennis, Cindi L; Borchers, Julie A et al. (2018) Nanoparticle architecture preserves magnetic properties during coating to enable robust multi-modal functionality. Sci Rep 8:12706
Kyker-Snowman, Kelly; Erlanger Avigdor, Bracha; Nasim, Mansoor et al. (2018) A primary breast cancer with distinct foci of estrogen receptor-alpha positive and negative cells derived from the same clonal origin as revealed by whole exome sequencing. Breast Cancer Res Treat 170:425-430
Christenson, Eric S; Antonarakis, Emmanuel S (2018) PARP inhibitors for homologous recombination-deficient prostate cancer. Expert Opin Emerg Drugs 23:123-133
El-Diwany, Ramy; Soliman, Mary; Sugawara, Sho et al. (2018) CMPK2 and BCL-G are associated with type 1 interferon-induced HIV restriction in humans. Sci Adv 4:eaat0843
Lee, Alice J; Montgomery, Madeline C; Patel, Rupa R et al. (2018) Improving Insurance and Health Care Systems to Ensure Better Access to Sexually Transmitted Disease Testing and Prevention. Sex Transm Dis 45:283-286
Bharathy, Narendra; Berlow, Noah E; Wang, Eric et al. (2018) The HDAC3-SMARCA4-miR-27a axis promotes expression of the PAX3:FOXO1 fusion oncogene in rhabdomyosarcoma. Sci Signal 11:
Ambinder, Richard F (2018) A viral protein kinase drug target for tumors? J Clin Invest 128:2197-2198
Huang, Peng; Park, Seyoun; Yan, Rongkai et al. (2018) Added Value of Computer-aided CT Image Features for Early Lung Cancer Diagnosis with Small Pulmonary Nodules: A Matched Case-Control Study. Radiology 286:286-295

Showing the most recent 10 out of 2393 publications