The aims of the USC Norris Cancer Control Research Program are to elucidate the etiology of cancer risk behaviors in the general population and develop primary prevention interventions that modify cancer risk behavior and enhance secondary prevention, clinical care, and survivorship.
These aims serve the overarching goal of reducing and eliminating cancer health disparities among the populations represented in the USC Norris catchment area, with implications for other populations globally. The Program's goals align with the USC Norris strategic plan by: a) developing and testing new interventions that impact the cancer burden; b) applying cutting-edge technology and methodology to assess exposures and disseminate interventions; and c) spanning the continuum of care from primary prevention to survivorship. A hallmark of this Program has been the application of innovative theory and methodology to develop integrated lines of research on cancer risk behaviors and preventive interventions. Given that the diverse, vulnerable, and disadvantaged members of the catchment area reached by the Program's work also reflect the disparities seen at the US population level and the Program makes significant strides in addressing the mission of NCI's efforts in cancer control and population sciences. Recent achievements of the Program, which is led by two internationally-recognized experts, Mary Ann Pentz (primary prevention) and Anna Wu (secondary prevention and survivorship), include 1) understanding mental health comorbidities with tobacco use to inform more tailored smoking cessation programs for vulnerable smokers who have been unable to quit by other means; 2) promoting cultural values and decreasing perceived cultural discrimination as means to improve tobacco prevention and control efforts with Hispanic youth and adults; and 3) utilizing executive function and mindfulness skills training in primary prevention programs that target diet, physical inactivity, and other cancer risk behaviors in youth and applying such interventions to cancer patients, caregivers, and families to improve treatment outcomes. The 30 members represent five schools and 13 departments at USC, and have $15M in peer-reviewed funding (direct costs), 33% of which is from NCI, 27% from other NIH sources, and 33% from other peer-reviewed funding sources. The Program is highly productive with 756 publications of which 17% are inter-programmatic, 23% intra-programmatic and 53% inter-institutional.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30CA014089-44
Application #
9607945
Study Section
Subcommittee I - Transistion to Independence (NCI)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2018-12-01
Budget End
2019-11-30
Support Year
44
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Type
DUNS #
072933393
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90089
Khanova, Elena; Wu, Raymond; Wang, Wen et al. (2018) Pyroptosis by caspase11/4-gasdermin-D pathway in alcoholic hepatitis in mice and patients. Hepatology 67:1737-1753
McSkane, Michelle; Stintzing, Sebastian; Heinemann, Volker et al. (2018) Association Between Height and Clinical Outcome in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Patients Enrolled Onto a Randomized Phase 3 Clinical Trial: Data From the FIRE-3 Study. Clin Colorectal Cancer 17:215-222.e3
Tokunaga, Ryuma; Cao, Shu; Naseem, Madiha et al. (2018) Prognostic Effect of Adenosine-related Genetic Variants in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Treated With Bevacizumab-based Chemotherapy. Clin Colorectal Cancer :
Brunette, Laurie L; Mhawech-Fauceglia, Paulette Y; Ji, Lingyun et al. (2018) Validity and prognostic significance of sperm protein 17 as a tumor biomarker for epithelial ovarian cancer: a retrospective study. BMC Cancer 18:970
Poulard, Coralie; Baulu, Estelle; Lee, Brian H et al. (2018) Increasing G9a automethylation sensitizes B acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells to glucocorticoid-induced death. Cell Death Dis 9:1038
Lang, Julie E; Brownson, Kirstyn E (2018) ASO Author Reflections: The Whole Transcriptome Landscape of Circulating Tumor Cells in Nonmetastatic Breast Cancer. Ann Surg Oncol :
Milam, Joel; Slaughter, Rhona; Tobin, Jessica L et al. (2018) Childhood Cancer Survivorship and Substance Use Behaviors: A Matched Case-Control Study Among Hispanic Adolescents and Young Adults. J Adolesc Health 63:115-117
Guo, Yu; Perez, Andrew A; Hazelett, Dennis J et al. (2018) CRISPR-mediated deletion of prostate cancer risk-associated CTCF loop anchors identifies repressive chromatin loops. Genome Biol 19:160
Suenaga, Mitsukuni; Schirripa, Marta; Cao, Shu et al. (2018) Potential role of PIN1 genotypes in predicting benefit from oxaliplatin-based and irinotecan-based treatment in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Pharmacogenomics J 18:623-632
Singh, Hardeep P; Wang, Sijia; Stachelek, Kevin et al. (2018) Developmental stage-specific proliferation and retinoblastoma genesis in RB-deficient human but not mouse cone precursors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E9391-E9400

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