Research at RTRN
     
cluster-image cluster-image cluster-image
     

Cancer

Login to Cancer Cluster workspace RTRN Login

Health disparities also persist with regard to cancer. Overall, black Americans are more likely to develop and die from cancer than persons of any other racial and ethnic group. Cancer incidence and death rates for men are highest among blacks, followed by whites, Hispanics, and Asian/Pacific Islanders.

Introduction

Prostate cancer incidence rates are about 3.5 times higher among black men than among Asian/Pacific Islander men, and prostate cancer death rates are almost 6 times higher among black men than among Asian/Pacific Islander men. Among men, lung cancer incidence rates are about 2.8 times higher among blacks than among Asian/Pacific Islanders. Lung cancer death rates are about 2.7 times higher among black men than among Hispanic men. Cancer death rates for women are highest among blacks, followed by whites, Hispanics, and Asian/Pacific Islanders. Breast cancer death rates are about 2.7 times higher among black women than among Asian/Pacific Islander women.

Source: U.S. Cancer Statistics Working Group. United States Cancer Statistics: 2001 Incidence and Mortality. Atlanta (GA): Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Cancer Institute; 2004.

Objectives

To promote intellectual exchange, generate innovative inter- and multi-disciplinary research.
To facilitate the movement of scientific advances across the translational research spectrum.
To Develop in collaboration with the DTCC additional multi-site research projects across disciplines that will capitalize on emerging technologic advances and unique resources.

Scientific Leadership

Dr. Hassan Ashktorab, Howard
Dr. Jaideep Chaudhary, Clark Atlanta

Cluster Scientists

Click here to view the Cluster Scientists

Meeting Schedule

Clusters Meeting Schedule

   

NIHNIMHD

RTRN is funded by the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) and co-funded by the National Institute for Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Founding RTRN Institutions
•Charles R. Drew University •City College of New York •Clark Atlanta University •Florida A&M University •Howard University •Hunter College-CUNY •Jackson State University • Meharry Medical College •Morehouse School of Medicine •Ponce School of Medicine •Texas Southern University •Tuskegee University •Universidad Central Del Caribe •University of Hawaii at Manoa •University of Puerto Rico-Medical Sciences Campus •University of Texas at El Paso •University of Texas at San Antonio •Xavier University of Louisiana

 

To Learn More About Joining the Network, Contact:
Keith Norris, MD (keith.norris@rtrn.net)
RTRN Principal Investigator
(323) 249-5703

Or
Keosha Partlow , PhD (keosha.partlow@rtrn.net
RTRN Program Manager
(323) 249-5706

To Learn More About the Research Clusters and
the RTRN Small Grants Program, Contact:

Richard Yanagihara, MD (richard.yanagihara@rtrn.net)
Director, RTRN Research Core
(808) 692-1610

Or
Zoe Hammatt, JD (zoe.hammatt@rtrn.net)
Ethics & Regulatory Specialist
(808) 692-0982

 

To Learn More About the RTRN Data and Technology Coordinating Center Services, Contact:
James Perkins, PhD (james.perkins@rtrn.net), (james.perkins@jsums.edu),
RTRN Co- Principal Investigator & Director of DTCC
(601) 979-0332

Or
M. Edwina Barnett, MD, PhD (m.edwina.barnett@rtrn.net)
DTCC Program Director
(601) 979-0332


To Learn More About the RTRN Steering Committee, Contact:
Emma Fernandez, PhD (e.fernandez@upr.edu)
RTRN Steering Committee Chair
(787) 763-9401