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Research We Fund: Extramural Discovery Science

RFA: Cancer Health Research Centers

Purpose

As part of the American Cancer Society (大象tv) mission to promote fair and just opportunity to prevent, detect, treat, and survive cancer, 大象tv has created the Cancer Health Research Center (CHERC) program. CHERC's are designed to address cancer health inequities that affect local or regional communities. Priority will be given to Centers that present an integrated framework that focuses on actionable, solution-based research designed to improve the health of the community and advance our goals for achieving health equity and reducing cancer mortality.

Background

Societal conditions where people are born, grow up, live, work, worship, and age, have a profound effect on their health, access to cancer care, and ability to act on health care recommendations.

Health outcomes are impacted by intersecting factors of wealth, discrimination, education, employment, geography, language, neighborhood, health systems, insurance coverage, and access to care. For equitable access to high-quality cancer care and the most effective ways to achieve optimal outcomes, there is a critical need for research that understands the context surrounding these health disparities, proposes and tests tangible solutions, and values community input.?

Mark Your Calendar

Summer Cycle

LOIs Materials Available:?December

LOIs Due:?February

Application Materials Available:?March

Applications Due:?June 1

Peer Review:?September

Anticipated Start:?April 1

Winter Cycle

LOI Materials Available:?Not applicable

LOIs Due:?Not applicable

Application Materials Available:?September

Applications Due:?December 1

Peer Review:?March

Anticipated Start:?October 1

Summer Cycles: New and new renewal applications will be accepted; no resubmissions accepted.

Winter Cycles: Only resubmissions of previously reviewed applications, including renewals, will be accepted; no new applications accepted.

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Scientific Scope

Successful applications will propose well-designed research projects poised to make an impact on their local community within the framework of a coordinated center approach that’s focused on demonstrated health inequities. Projects may span the cancer continuum and include health promotion, cancer prevention, screening, treatment, access to care, care delivery, and/or survivorship.?

Community engagement is vital for successful implementation and should be central to the development of the CHERC. The description of the CHERC should clearly present the center’s overall scientific agenda, magnitude of the health inequity(ies) being addressed, thematic connections across presented research, and how the CHERC achieves more as a unit, than as independently conducted projects.
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Informational Webinar to Learn More

Interested investigators may watch a recording of the most recent webinar to learn more about this funding opportunity.

When:?TBD


There are many examples of health inequities affecting the population in the United States. 大象tv has identified the following priority areas (additional topics may be considered with appropriate justification by the applicant):

  • Rural Communities/Access to Health
  • Early Onset Cancers
  • Racial/Ethnic Disparities - American Indian/Alaskan Native, Black, Asian, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
  • Immigrant Populations
  • Sexual/Gender Minorities
  • Age-specific Needs (pediatrics, adolescents/young adults, older adults)
  • Environmental Justice (radon, climate change)
  • Physical and Mental Disabilities

This RFA is a call for solution-based research addressing cancer health disparities that will enable fair and just opportunities to prevent, detect, treat, and survive cancer for everyone. Due to the complexities associated with the social and structural drivers of health that are responsible for cancer inequalities, we encourage multilevel models and research that address these interrelated factors. Applicants should demonstrate their ability to reach populations of interest and describe how the proposed methodologies will produce meaningful results. ?

In support of its overall mission, the CHERC should establish a supportive Core that?is managed and coordinated by the Principal Investigator (PI). The Supportive Core should include operational and scientific activities designed to develop, promote, and enhance the scientific agenda of the CHERC, creating an optimal environment to address health equity research. Acceptable activities may include developing commonly used methods and tools, sharing resources, collaborations, facilitating relevant mentoring and training, pilot projects, community engagement, and disseminating research findings. Proposed evaluation metrics to monitor the progress and successes of the Core should be included in the application.

Eligibility

All applicants must be independent researchers at eligible US academic institutions or nonprofits. Applicants from underrepresented groups and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) are encouraged to apply. Previous CHERC awardees are permitted to submit applications for competitive renewals. Awardees are limited to one renewal.

The Center’s PI must have a strong track record of addressing cancer health equity as evidenced by extramural cancer research funding, mentoring junior investigators, publications in peer-reviewed journals, and administrative/leadership experience.

Project Budget and Subaward Mechanism(s)

These awards support a total budget of $4.07M ($3.7M direct costs plus 10% indirect costs) for a 4-year project period that includes research subawards and CHERC Supportive Core activities. The PI may propose any combination of subawards and Core costs as long as they do not exceed specified budget limits. There is no designated budget cap for the CHERC Supportive Core, but all activities must be included in the budget justification.

Research subawards include the following 大象tv research grant mechanisms:

Clinician Scientist Development Grants (CSDGs) provide support for protected time to allow faculty who are involved with patient care to develop as independent clinician scientists through mentoring and research training. Applicants cannot have an independent research program or R-level funding at the time of application. CSDG applicants can propose 3- or 4-year projects, at $135,000 direct costs per year. If this subaward is at a secondary institution, 10% indirect costs per year may be claimed by the secondary institution.

Research Scholar Grants (RSGs) provide support to independent, self-directed researchers for 4 years at $215,000 per year direct costs. To be eligible, subaward PIs must have a full-time faculty position and a doctoral degree. If this subaward is at a secondary institution, 10% indirect costs may be claimed by the secondary institution. For this RFA, faculty may have any rank.

Note: As of 2025, individual postdoctoral fellowships are no longer included as part of this award, but postdocs are encouraged to apply through our standard PF mechanism.?

Postdoctoral fellows may be included in the Center or the subaward budgets as personnel.

Letter-of-Intent Process?

Summer application cycle: A letter-of-intent (LOI) process will be used for selecting investigators to submit a full application. LOIs are only required for new submissions.

Applicants and the research team are strongly encouraged to discuss their application with the program office prior to submitting an LOI.

See CHERC LOI Instructions

Winter application cycle: Only resubmitted CHERC applications will be accepted. Therefore, the LOI process is not applicable.

Expectations for Full Applications

Summer application cycle: If the LOI is approved, the CHERC PI will be given access to the application materials for the Center application. The program office will give all subaward PIs of an approved LOI access to the application materials in ProposalCentral.

Winter application cycle: The program office will give all PIs (Center and subaward applications) access to the application materials in ProposalCentral.

Required application components for the CHERC and the subawards can be found in the CHERC Instructions document. CHERC policies and application instructions will be posted approximately 3 months before the next application deadline.

See CHERC Policies

See CHERC Instructions

Application Review

An independent and competitive peer review of all grant applications will be conducted. Reviewers will evaluate proposals based on the relevance to cancer equity, scientific rigor, investigator team and environment, innovation, and the potential impact on the local community.

Summer application deadline: June 1

Winter application deadline: December 1

If the grant application deadline falls on a weekend or holiday, applications will be accepted the following business day.

Program Contact:

Interested applicants are encouraged to contact Dr. Joanne Elena at joanne.elena@cancer.org.?