Developing an Oncology Workforce for the 21st Century
Project Number5K12CA139160-15
Contact PI/Project LeaderOLOPADE, OLUFUNMILAYO F. Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
The overall goal of the dual-track University of Chicago Paul Calabresi Career Development Award for Clinical
Oncology is to increase the number of highly skilled clinicians (M.D.s, D.O,s, Pharm.D., nurses with PhD or
equivalent) and non-clinician postdoctoral researchers who are capable of designing and testing innovative
hypothesis-driven clinical therapeutic research protocols in clinical trial settings (pilot/Phase I, Phase II and
Phase III trials). To do this, we have created a tightly structured and mentored education program within an
academically rigorous training environment that prepares the most compelling senior fellows or junior faculty in
clinical oncology for careers in patient oriented research. The program is anchored within our Comprehensive
Cancer Center and led by Olufunmilayo Olopade, MD along with Walter Stadler, MD with strong support from
an Executive Committee as well as Internal and External Advisory Committees. The 78 research training
faculty preceptors have NIH or equivalent peer- reviewed funding, interact on a number of collaborative
research and training efforts and are well qualified to serve as potential mentors for the five trainees per year
participating in this K12 program. Each trainee is appointed for a minimum of two years. In this renewal
application, we shall continue successful elements of the program in clinical pharmacology, genomics and
immunotherapy while enhancing training opportunities in emerging fields of clinical informatics, data science
and microbiome research. The Paul Calabresi K12 Scholars Program is our highly mentored, didactic
coursework-intensive program, and “hands on” clinical research training which results in a Master of Science in
Clinical Investigation. Leveraging clinical research infrastructure across University of Chicago Medicine, we
have also created a flexible set of integrated interdisciplinary courses in translational science that blends
entrepreneurships, cancer genomics, immunology, pharmacogenomics and community based clinical trials
network. Of the 18 trainees who have completed the program since 2010, 13 (72%) are currently in academic
careers, of whom 7 (54%) hold appointments at the Associate Professor level. Moreover, these 18 trainees
have published a total of 176 oncology research papers, and are Principal Investigators or Co-Investigators on
56 oncology research grant awards. Of significance, 7 of 14 (50%) appointments to the program in the last
funding cycle were women or members of underserved minority groups. An explicit goal of this Paul
Calabresi Scholars program, as with all training programs in our institution, is that its training opportunities
and benefits will extend far beyond the relatively few scholars whose stipends it will provide. The program
has had a transformative and global impact and is reaching into the larger oncology trainee community in
Chicago and to trainees in other countries who come to our Institution as Global Oncology Scholars. Thus,
the benefit that accrues from the program's implementation and productivity is substantial and will
increase the number of highly skilled clinicians and non-clinicians conducting cancer clinical trials.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
The overall goal of the University of Chicago K12 program in Oncology is to provide a distinct pathway of
training, producing the next generation of highly skilled academic Oncologists who are capable of designing
and administering hypothesis-driven pilot/Phase I, Phase II and Phase III cancer therapeutic trials on a global
scale. Leveraging resources across the University, the Paul Calabresi K12 Scholars Program is our highly
mentored, didactic coursework-intensive program, and “hands on” clinical research training which results in a
Master of Science in Clinical Investigation. The strength of our clinical programs coupled with our research
intensity and our focus on genetics/genomics and experimental therapeutics makes the University of Chicago
an ideal institution for the preparation of a clinical oncology workforce for the era of precision medicine in
Oncology.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Advisory CommitteesAppointmentAwardChicagoClinicalClinical InformaticsClinical OncologyClinical PharmacologyClinical ResearchClinical TrialsClinical Trials NetworkCommunitiesComprehensive Cancer CenterCountryData ScienceDoctor of MedicineDoctor of PharmacyDoctor of PhilosophyEducationElementsEntrepreneurshipEnvironmentFacultyFundingGenomicsGoalsImmunologyImmunotherapyInstitutionK-Series Research Career ProgramsMaster of ScienceMedicineMentored Clinical Scientist Development ProgramMentorsMinority GroupsNursesOncologyPaperPeer ReviewPharmacogenomicsPhasePostdoctoral FellowPrincipal InvestigatorProductivityProtocols documentationPublishingQualifyingResearchResearch InfrastructureResearch PersonnelResearch Project GrantsResearch TrainingScholars ProgramStructureTeacher Professional DevelopmentTestingTherapeutic ResearchTrainingTraining ProgramsTranslational ResearchUnited States National Institutes of HealthUniversitiesWomancancer clinical trialcancer genomicscareerclinical investigationdesignflexibilityinnovationmembermicrobiome researchmid-career facultypatient oriented researchphase III trialprogramsskillstraining opportunityunderserved minority
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Publications
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Outcomes
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