Alerts
Holiday Hours Information

In recognition of the Christmas and New Year’s holidays, some of The University of Kansas Cancer Center’s offices will have modified hours on Wednesday, December 25, and Wednesday, January 1.

Skip Navigation
Research in Our Communities

NCI Community Oncology Research Program

In 2019, The University of Kansas Cancer Center and its outreach network partner, Masonic Cancer Alliance, were awarded a grant to expand the reach of cancer clinical trials to Kansas’ rural communities. The six-year grant designates the team as a minority/underserved (MU) community site of the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI) Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP). There are 14 such sites in the U.S., and the cancer center team is the only site that focuses on rural communities.

NCORP logo

The University of Kansas Cancer Center – Masonic Cancer Alliance Rural NCORP (KUCC-MCA Rural NCORP), led by Priyanka Sharma, MD, and Gary Doolittle, MD, is charged with accruing individuals to NCI-approved cancer clinical trials and research studies that include cancer prevention, screening, supportive care and symptom management, treatment, quality of life and cancer care delivery. The team is further strengthened by its statewide rural primary care practice-based research network, Kansas Patients and Providers Engaged in Prevention Research, led by Allen Greiner, MD, MPH.

Why is this important?

People in rural communities are less likely to develop cancer, but more likely to die from it compared to those living in urban areas. Challenges faced by those living in rural communities include:

  • Lack of screening, treatment access
  • Shortage of rural oncologists
  • Higher rates of behavioral risk factors (smoking, high BMI, low physical activity)
  • Few transportation options, extreme distances, weather conditions
  • Lack of insurance coverage

Of the 123 counties in the cancer center’s catchment area, 96 of them are rural or frontier counties. As the only National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center in the region, we have a unique obligation to bridge the gap in rural cancer care and prevention. This includes easier access to clinical trials.

Researchers also benefit. Participants in studies must reflect the diversity of our communities, cultures and conditions. By engaging people from all geographic areas and backgrounds, study results are more representative and, therefore, more relevant.

Ask about our clinical trials.

Clinical trials can help you learn more about your options. Search clinical trials available at our cancer center. Call 913-588-3671 or email CC_Scheduling@kumc.edu.

Related links