Grant Details
| Grant Number: |
1U01CA301481-01A1 Interpret this number |
| Primary Investigator: |
Rosenberg, Shoshana |
| Organization: |
Weill Medical Coll Of Cornell Univ |
| Project Title: |
Aya Cohort to Enhance Survivorship in Nyc (Aces-Nyc) |
| Fiscal Year: |
2026 |
Abstract
More than 80,000 new cases of adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancers are diagnosed annually in the United
States. Alarmingly, the incidence of AYA cancers is expected to continue to rise in the coming years leading to
a growing population of AYA survivors. Due to their young age at diagnosis, AYA survivors experience an
extended survivorship during which they often contend with a spectrum of late and long-term effects of treatment,
many of which have not been well-characterized in AYAs treated in the contemporary treatment era where novel
therapies, including newer targeted agents, are increasingly used. Further, individuals representing different
ages, diagnoses, and socio-economic backgrounds are often not well represented in AYA survivorship research.
To address this gap, and given rates of AYA cancers are higher in New York City (NYC) compared to overall rates
in the United States, we are proposing to establish the AYA Cohort to Enhance Survivorship in NYC (ACES-
NYC), a prospective cohort that will enroll and engage 2000 AYA cancer survivors treated at three NYC cancer
centers (Weill Cornell Medicine, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, and Memorial Sloan Kettering
Cancer Center). In this cohort, we propose to characterize adverse short and long-term effects in the
contemporary treatment era across a wide spectrum of AYA cancers, focusing on three central issues that
uniquely impact AYA survivors: 1) fertility outcomes/reproductive health; 2) endocrine dysfunction
(hypo/hyperthyroidism, obesity, diabetes); and 3) sexual functioning. Leveraging a mobile health application
(app) platform that allows for linkage with the medical record, we will collect comprehensive treatment and clinical
data, patient-reported data via serial surveys, sensor-based data collection enabled by the app, in addition to
biospecimen acquisition. We will aim to: 1) determine the short and long-term impact of treatment on fertility
outcomes, sexual health, and endocrine function, 2) determine demographic and clinical factors associated with
underutilization of follow-up care related to reproductive, psychosocial, and endocrine health to inform timing
and targets for intervention, and 3) develop, employ, and evaluate novel methods of data collection and
engagement, in partnership with community-based stakeholders and patient advocates, to optimize recruitment
and retention and to facilitate sharing of research results and survivorship resources. Together with community,
patient, and research partners, our team will build and leverage ACES-NYC to shed light on numerous gaps in
our knowledge of AYA cancer survivors’ short- and long-term experiences and needs, with a focus on improving
survivorship care delivery and outcomes in this population.
Publications
Error Notice
The database may currently be offline for maintenance and should be operational soon. If not, we have been notified of this error and will be reviewing it shortly.
We apologize for the inconvenience.
- The DCCPS Team.