Kim Irwin (kirwin@mednet.ucla.edu)
For Immediate Release
UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer
Center
March 23, 2006
(310) 206-2805
Stephanie Elsea (stephamie.elsea@laf.org)
Lance Armstrong Foundation
(512) 236-8820, ext. 150
UCLA’S JONSSON CANCER CENTER NAMED
SURVIVORSHIP CENTER OF EXCELLENCE BY LANCE ARMSTRONG
FOUNDATION
UCLA Awarded a Five-year, $1.7-million Grant to
Create a
Comprehensive Program to Address the Needs of Cancer
Survivors
UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center has been named
a LIVESTRONG™
Survivorship Center of Excellence by the Lance Armstrong
Foundation (LAF) and will join a network of five leading
centers nationwide that will work together to address the
needs of the growing number of cancer survivors in the
United States.
A five-year, $1.7-million grant from the
foundation will establish UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center
Survivorship Program, a member of the LIVESTRONG
Survivorship Center of Excellence Network. The new program
will build on the Jonsson center’s two decades of
survivorship research and put into place critical clinical
programs to help cancer survivors transition into their
disease-free lives, said Dr. Patricia Ganz, head of cancer
prevention and control research at the Jonsson Cancer Center
and director of the new survivorship center.
“This is a great opportunity for us to organize
all of UCLA’s existing survivorship programs and marry our
research with new clinical programs that will allow us to
coordinate follow-up care for cancer survivors,” Ganz said.
“Oncologists often have no idea what happens to patients
when they finish treatment. Patients go back to their
primary care providers and there are vital issues that need
to be addressed that sometimes aren’t communicated.
Survivors often don’t know what kind of surveillance and
follow-up care they need to monitor for disease recurrence
or any late effects that may result from their cancer
treatment.”
The formation of the LIVESTRONG
Survivorship Center of Excellence Network was announced
today by LAF officials. The network is an invitation-only
collaborative partnership among the LAF, National Cancer
Institute (NCI)-designated comprehensive cancer centers at
leading medical institutions nationwide and their community
affiliates. Working together, network member institutions
will address topics such as critical survivorship research,
new interventions and progress in insurance reimbursement in
order to provide the most effective survivorship care. This
progressive, comprehensive support for survivorship is
designed to help people living with cancer deal with the
emotional, practical and physical issues they will face.
In addition to the UCLA’s Jonsson Cancer Center,
network members include:
- Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Seattle,
Wash.)
- University of Colorado Cancer Center (Denver, Colo.)
- Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York,
N.Y.)
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston, Mass.)
“Extended cancer survival is a relatively new
phenomenon, so the current pace of research and development
of effective models of care lags behind the need,” said
Caroline Huffman, LAF survivorship network officer. “To help
accelerate the pace of progress in addressing the needs of
the growing survivor community, we established the LIVESTRONG
Survivorship Center of Excellence Network to serve as
comprehensive, one-stop sources of information, care and
services for cancer survivors, family members and service
providers.”
More than 10 million Americans are living with
cancer today, Ganz said. As the number of people surviving
cancer continues to rise and as their challenges grow in
magnitude and complexity, an increasing need exists for new
models of survivorship care and research.
“Joining this network is the natural evolution
of our longstanding commitment to cancer survivorship
research and excellence in health care delivery,” Ganz said.
“The Jonsson Cancer Center was among the first in the nation
to establish a division of cancer control, and has had a
research program focused on patients and survivors for the
past decade. This grant is expected to help fulfill UCLA’s
unrealized potential to focus on the clinical care of cancer
survivors and to promote interaction in the Los Angeles
region and within the LIVESTRONG Survivorship Center
of Excellence Network.”
In addition to the 2,000 newly diagnosed cancer
patients seen by UCLA oncologists each year, the center of
excellence grant will provide support for a formal
collaboration between the Jonsson Cancer Center and Kaiser
Permanente, Southern California, HealthCare Partners Medical
Group and Torrance Memorial Medical Center. This will allow
Ganz and other Jonsson Cancer Center investigators to work
with their collaborating partners to improve the quality of
cancer survivorship care within the greater Los Angeles
region. It is also expected to foster a wider range of
cancer survivorship studies in different systems of health
care with a diverse population of cancer survivors.
“Solving the problem of how best to deliver
coordinated and caring follow-up services within existing
health care settings will not be simple,” Ganz said. “It
will require teamwork among clinicians, researchers, health
care executives, community leaders, survivors and others.”
In addition to coordinating UCLA’s various
survivorship programs, the grant will allow Ganz and her
team to develop community-based programs with affiliated
partners to facilitate coordinated post-treatment follow-up
for patients who are considered disease-free. An outpatient
clinic will be established at UCLA for survivors UCLA
patients and those treated in the community to provide
consultation and follow-up care. The clinic will be staffed
by a family nurse practitioner supervised by Ganz and Dr.
Jacqueline Casillas, associate director of the new
survivorship center and a pediatric oncologist specializing
in the care of long-term childhood cancer survivors.
A social worker will perform an intake
assessment and provide follow-up as needed. Cancer survivors
also will get the opportunity to participate in leading-edge
survivorship research being conducted at the Jonsson Cancer
Center. Such research, Ganz said, is vital to advance
knowledge and improve care. Marjorie Kagawa-Singer, a
professor in the community health sciences department in the
UCLA School of Public Health, will serve as associate
director for community outreach and will help the UCLA-LIVESTRONG
Cancer Survivorship Center of Excellence reach the many
community organizations in the region that provide
psychosocial and other support services to cancer patients
and survivors.
A founding member of the National Coalition for
Cancer Survivorship, Ganz has for the last 20 years
conducted pioneering research focused on improving the
quality of life and quality of care outcomes for cancer
survivors. Additionally, she has mentored a generation of
researchers who work collaboratively to advance knowledge in
this expanding field. Her leadership and research has
established the Jonsson Cancer Center’s survivorship
research program into one of the strongest in the country.
UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center comprises
more than 240 researchers and clinicians engaged in
research, prevention, detection, control, treatment and
education. One of the nation's largest comprehensive cancer
centers, the Jonsson center is dedicated to promoting
research and translating the results into leading-edge
clinical studies. In July 2005, the Jonsson Cancer
Center was named the best cancer center in the western
United States by U.S. News & World Report, a ranking it has
held for six consecutive years.
The Lance Armstrong Foundation inspires and empowers
people affected by cancer. LAF helps people with cancer
focus on living and believes that unity is strength,
knowledge is power and attitude is everything. From the
moment of diagnosis, the LAF provides the practical
information and tools people with cancer need to live life
on their own terms. The LAF serves its mission through
advocacy, public health and research. Founded in 1997 by
cancer survivor and champion cyclist Lance Armstrong, the
LAF is located in Austin, Texas.
-UCLA-
For more information on the Jonsson Cancer Center,
visit our web site at
www.cancer.mednet.ucla.edu. For more information
on the LAF, visit
www.livestrong.org.
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