In addition to formal scientific programs, OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center houses a number of research centers funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other sponsors that serve to focus collaborative research around specific thematic areas. Because of their transdisciplinary nature, these research centers help to promote collaborations among members in different SCC research programs. Current Stephenson Cancer Center research centers are:
The goal of the NIH-funded Center for Cancer Prevention and Drug Development (CCPDD) is to eliminate benign or recurrent tumors before they can become cancerous and spread throughout a person's body. To accomplish this goal, the CCPDD is studying how risk factors increase the development and progression of tumors. The knowledge gained is used to devise and test strategies to prevent cancer in preclinical models. These strategies include drugs that target specific molecules shown to drive cancer development and progression, and also drugs that stimulate the immune system to eliminate tumor cells. The CCPDD has a unique combination of molecular and cellular biologists, pharmacologists, pathologists, veterinary scientists, immunologists, nutritionists, natural product and medicinal chemists, and clinicians who conduct translational research trials. This multidisciplinary team facilitates the identification of risk factors and drug targets, the development of prevention strategies, and the design and conduct of successful clinical prevention trials.
The mission of the TSET Health Promotion Research Center is to reduce the burden of disease in Oklahoma by addressing modifiable health risk factors such as tobacco use, sedentary lifestyle, poor diet, and risky alcohol and other substance use through research, novel intervention development, and dissemination of research findings. The HPRC contains four major resources that facilitate research and are led by HPRC faculty: Mobile Health Shared Resource, Tobacco Treatment Research Program, Postdoctoral Fellowship Training Program, and Tobacco Regulatory Science Clinical Laboratory. The TSET HPRC is housed in SCC and is funded by a grant from the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET).
NIGMS P20: Mentoring Translational Cancer Research in Oklahoma
The goal of the NIH-funded Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) is to enhance cancer research and infrastructure in Oklahoma, focused on a theme of mentoring translational research. The program supports four Promising Junior Investigators (PJIs), each of whom are paired with a mentoring team of NIH-funded scientists. The PJIs work on an independent research project, funded by the COBRE grant, with the goal of submitting an NIH or other national peer-reviewed grant at the end of their mentorship terms.
NIGMS P20: Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translational Cancer Research
The goal of the NIH-funded Center for Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) is to establish a new biomedical imaging research center with appropriate infrastructure and research capacity along with a multidisciplinary mentoring team to support the promising research project leaders of junior investigators as they conduct innovative translational cancer research projects. The success of COBRE will ultimately have a high research and clinical impact, leading to a reduced cancer burden both for individual patients and society.
Stephenson Cancer Center also actively collaborates with a number of university and campus-based research centers to leverage expertise and resources to fight cancer. These include:
The Reynolds Oklahoma Center on Aging (ROCA) is one of the nation’s premier interdisciplinary programs conducting aging research, combining basic science research in biogerontology and clinical research in geriatric medicine with the training of the next generation of scientists in the conduct of aging studies. Resources housed in ROCA include an NIH T32 Geroscience Training Program and an Oklahoma Nathan Shock Center in Aging. The program is supported by generous funding from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation. SCC and ROCA are actively collaborating to establish a focus in Gero-Oncology through focused pilot grant funding and joint recruitment. Eight ROCA investigators conduct cancer-related work and are members of Stephenson Cancer Center.
The Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources (OSCTR) is an NIH-funded infrastructure and faculty development center designed to: 1) serve as a catalyst to facilitate clinical and translational research in Oklahoma; 2) improve health for underserved and underrepresented populations living in rural areas; 3) provide clinical and translational research training and infrastructure to junior investigators; 4) expand opportunities for communities to participate in clinical and translational research; and 5) improve the overall health of Oklahoma’s citizens. The OSCTR supports numerous programs designed to build research capacity and to facilitate student and faculty career development. Stephenson Cancer Center and OSCTR collaborate to enhance research on the OUHSC campus. Both support career development of promising junior investigators through joint recruitment dollars and funded pilot grants. In addition, they collaborate to organize and support grant writing training symposia. Stephenson Cancer Center members serve as mentors in several OSCTR education and training programs as well as in key OSCTR program leadership positions. Finally, the OSCTR provides important support for Stephenson Cancer Center biospecimen storage.
The Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF) is a private, not-for-profit biomedical research institute located on the OU Health Sciences Center (OUHSC) campus in Oklahoma. OMRF houses nearly 50 faculty researchers and is nationally recognized for outstanding vascular biology and immunology research. In addition, OMRF has well-developed research core infrastructure available to the OMRF and OUHSC campus community. Most OMRF faculty hold adjunct appointments in OUHSC departments, underscoring the close relationship between the two institutions. Stephenson Cancer Center and OMRF have a long history of collaboration. Several OMRF-based faculty are Affiliate Members of the Stephenson Cancer Center and work with Stephenson Cancer Centerresearchers on cancer-focused projects, especially in the area of basic cancer biology. Stephenson Cancer Center has supported recruitment of cancer investigators at OMRF and has provided pilot grant funding to OMRF researchers.