Grant Details
| Grant Number: |
5U54CA280770-04 Interpret this number |
| Primary Investigator: |
Pisu, Maria |
| Organization: |
University Of Alabama At Birmingham |
| Project Title: |
Center for Cancer Control in Persistent Poverty Areas (C3P2) |
| Fiscal Year: |
2026 |
Abstract
OVERALL ABSTRACT
Cancer mortality, especially for obesity-related cancers like breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer, is higher in areas of
the US affected by Persistent Poverty (PP), i.e., areas with a poverty rate of 20% or higher across four consecutive
decennial censuses spanning 30 years (a formal geographic classification developed by the US Department of Agriculture
and codified by Congress), compared to areas in which poverty has not persisted for decades. While reasons may be
multifaceted, the role of the living environments in these areas cannot be overlooked: aspects of such environments (e.g.,
poor walkability and low social cohesion) have downstream effects on behaviors that impact health promotion and
increase cancer risk and mortality. Multi-level interventions are necessary to mitigate these effects. In 2021, Alabama
ranked 8th in the US for poverty. The state includes some of the most impoverished inner-city and rural communities in
the nation, and thus a considerable number of both urban and rural Census Tracts (CTs) identified as PP areas by the
National Cancer Institute (NCI). The overall goal of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Center for Cancer
Control in Persistent Poverty Areas (C3P2) is to reduce the burden of cancer and cancer disparities in PP areas by
expanding research and research capacity through implementation and evaluation of multi-level interventions to improve
cancer outcomes across the cancer control continuum from prevention to survivorship. The C3P2 goal will be achieved
through: 1) Establishment and support of two transdisciplinary, multi-level, multi-domain research projects to adapt,
implement, and evaluate multilevel interventions across the cancer control continuum from prevention to survivorship, as
well as pilot projects through a Developmental Core; 2) Establishment of a coordinated C3P2 infrastructure to support and
strengthen the C3P2 research agenda by: a) providing overall integrated management and comprehensive evaluation, b)
providing common research resources and measures to promote project integration and collaboration (Administrative and
Research and Methods Cores); 3) Development of a pipeline of investigators for cancer control research in PP areas by
providing training, support, and research experience opportunity to early career investigators (Career Enhancement
Core); 4) Academic-community partnership building with establishment of a Community Advisory Board and engagement
of Community COaCHes to support innovative and salient research in the community, and monitoring and evaluation to
ensure achievement of proposed goals. (Administrative Core). Our multi-disciplinary team of established and early career
investigators, working in a supportive environment with the resources and commitment to address and challenges in PP
areas to cancer prevention and control, are well positioned to make an impact in PP communities of Alabama and
improve cancer outcomes. The C3P2 will serve as a model to improve cancer prevention and control for other PP areas in
Alabama and other states.
Publications
Social and Legal Needs in Patients and Families With Cancer: Interaction With Patient-Level Financial Toxicity.
Authors: Anant S.
, Jiang C.
, Doran J.
, Gany F.
, Gupta A.
, Rocque G.B.
, Knight L.K.
, Hussaini S.M.Q.
.
Source: Jco Oncology Practice, 2025 Jan; 21(1), p. 41-51.
EPub date: 2025-01-10 00:00:00.0.
PMID: 39793548
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