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CPRIT Prevention Program Overview
June 10, 2016
Presented By:
Dr. Rebecca Garcia
Ms. Ramona Magid
CPRIT’s Mission and Action
Mission
• Create and expedite
innovation in cancer
research into
prevention and
cures
• Attract, create, or
expand research
capabilities
Action
Award merit-based, peer reviewed grants to
Texas-based entities and institutions for cancerrelated research, product development and the
delivery of cancer prevention programs and
services.
• Create high-quality
new jobs in Texas
• Develop and
implement the
Texas Cancer Plan
Research
Prevention
Product
Development
2
The Promise of Prevention

An estimated 39,500 Texans will die from cancer
in 2016

~50% of cancers could be prevented


Example: not smoking could prevent 30% of all cancers
and 80% of lung cancers
Every $1 spent through CPRIT for
screening/prevention leads to $22 in treatment
cost savings, preserved productivity and other
economic benefits through earlier detection of
cancers.
3
Prevention Program Priorities
Principles
Fund evidence-based
interventions and
their dissemination
Support the continuum
of primary, secondary
and tertiary
prevention
interventions
2015 Prevention Program Priorities
• Prioritize populations and geographic
areas of greatest need, greatest
potential for impact
• Focus on underserved populations
• Increase targeting of preventive efforts
to areas where significant disparities in
cancer incidence or mortality in the state
exist
Prevention Program Achievements
 Over 1.3M education and 1.5M
clinical preventive services
provided, including:
2.8 Million
Prevention
Services to Texans
• Screening & diagnostics for
breast, cervical and colorectal
cancer
• Prevention vaccinations
• Tobacco cessation services
• Genetic testing and counseling
• Survivorship services
As of May 2016
5
Prevention Program Achievements
Counties Served by CPRIT Prevention Projects: 62 Active Projects – May 2016
6 Statewide/
Dissemination
Projects
6
Areas of Emphasis

All applications responsive to RFA are considered

Areas of Emphasis highlight:


Geographic areas with higher incidence and mortality
Primary cancer prevention


Screening/early detection


sustainable behavior change & areas not well represented in portfolio (e.g.,
tobacco cessation, liver cancer prevention)
population and geographic disparities
Survivorship and improved quality of life

measurable improvement
7
FY17 Prevention Cycle 1
RFA Release
Date
May 26, 2016
Submit
Aug 30, 2016
Award
Feb 15, 2017
Contract start date Mar 1, 2017
8
FY17 Cycle 1 RFAs
Evidence-Based Cancer Prevention Services-See, Test & Treat®
Program
Up to $25,000 in direct costs for up to 12 months
Dissemination of CPRIT-Funded Cancer Control Interventions
Up to $300,000 in direct costs for up to 24 months
Cancer Prevention Promotion and Navigation to Clinical Services
Up to $400,000 in direct costs for up to 36 months
Evidence-Based Cancer Prevention Services
Up to $1.5 million in direct costs for up to 36 months
Competitive Continuation/Expansion for Evidence-Based
Prevention Services
Up to $1.5 million in direct costs for up to 36 months
9
EvidenceBased Cancer
Prevention
Services-See,
Test & Treat®
One-day cervical and breast cancer
screening program
up to $25K, up to
12 months
Collaboration between CAP Foundation
and CPRIT
 Led by pathologist in partnership with others
 Same-day or prompt results for participants
 Cancer prevention & lifestyle education included
 Processes for both organizations must be followed
 CAP Foundation may provide funding for expenses
not reimbursable by CPRIT
10
Dissemination
of CPRITFunded Cancer
Control
Interventions
Dissemination of tools/materials/best
practices
 Package strategies to introduce, modify, and
implement successful, previously or currently funded
CPRIT projects
Dissemination strategies
up to $300K, up to
24 months
 Two or more active strategies required
 Propose approaches for overcoming possible barriers
Training/Technical assistance
 Identify and guide adopters in developing plans to
adapt, refine, and implement projects
11
Cancer
Prevention
Promotion and
Navigation to
Clinical
Services
up to $400K, up to
36 months
Health promotion, public education, and
outreach program
 evidence-based strategies designed to change and
support personal behavior change
Navigation services (required)
 assist participants in obtaining the prevention
interventions being promoted through navigation.
System and process improvement
 Improving outreach, delivery, referral processes and
systems
Outcome Measures
 focus of the outcome measures on actions taken as a
result of the intervention and navigation services
12
EvidenceBased Cancer
Prevention
Services
up to $1.5 M, up to
36 months
Deliver at least one service:
Primary prevention
 e.g., vaccines, risk assessment, counseling and
treatment related to healthy diet, tobacco
cessation, physical activity, etc.
Screening /Early detection
 e.g., for breast, cervical, and/or colorectal
cancer
Survivorship services
 e.g., physical rehabilitation/therapy,
psychosocial interventions
Comprehensive
 include education, delivery of service, navigation
and system and/or policy improvements
 Address access to treatment
18
Competitive
Continuation/
Expansion

Continue or expand only projects
previously or currently funded that have
demonstrated exemplary success
up to $1.5M, up to
36 months

Closely follow the intent and core
elements of current or previous project


build on its initial results and continue to
demonstrate ingenuity and resourcefulness
Have feasible plans to integrate some or
all of the project into existing and
sustainable systems
14
Peer Review Evaluation Criteria

Impact and Innovation

Project Strategy and Feasibility

Evaluation

Organizational Qualifications and Capabilities

Integration and Capacity Building
15
Multi-Stage Review Process
Peer Review
• Criteria in RFA
• Based on individual merit, not comparison
Programmatic Review
•
•
•
•
Potential for Impact and Return on Investment
Geographic distribution
Cancer type
Type of program
16
Prevention Review Council
Steve W. Wyatt, DMD, MPH, Prevention Review Council Chair
Senior Associate Director and Vice President for Research at UK
Center for Clinical and Translational Science and Norton Healthcare
Nancy C. Lee, MD, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Health - Women’s
Health and the Director of the Office on Women's Health (OWH) at
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Ross C. Brownson, PhD, Professor, Brown School and the Alvin J.
Siteman Cancer Center at Washington University
17
Applying for a CPRIT Prevention Grant

Go to https://cpritgrants.org/ to view current
RFAs

Go to https://cpritgrants.org/ to submit an
application

Application deadline: August 30, 2016
18
CPRIT Prevention Team
Phone: 512.305.8417
Email: [email protected]
Web:
www.cprit.state.tx.us
19
Discussion
•
•
•
What do you see as the biggest cancer
disparities/needs in your community/region?
What resources are available to address the
burden of cancer in your region?
What are some of the challenges?
20