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Interactive map aims to improve cancer care in developing nations

Map from Global Cancer Project.

Graphic from Global Cancer Project Map.

Stanford Medicine News Center - March 26th, 2015 - by Ruthann Richter

Most people don’t associate cancer with people living in developing nations, yet 60 percent of new cancer cases and 70 percent of cancer deaths occur there, according to the World Health Organization.

Now, the nonprofit Global Oncology Inc. has launched the Global Cancer Project Map, a first-of-its-kind resource to connect international cancer experts with one another, in an effort to advance the organization’s goal of improving cancer research and care in the developing world.

The interactive map includes more than 800 projects on six continents. With a few simple clicks, users can search for cancer experts and research projects and then contact the investigators and program managers. The goal is to spur collaboration among people in the field and enable experts to share their collective knowledge.

Global Cancer Project Map.

Global Oncology Inc.: The interactive map currently
includes more than 800 projects on six continents.

“Before, it was difficult or often impossible to find information about cancer projects or experts, especially in limited-resource settings,” said Ami Bhatt, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine and of genetics at the School of Medicine and co-founder of the nonprofit. “The map now makes it possible to connect colleagues in the global cancer community with a maximum of six clicks of a computer mouse.”

The map can be found at http://globalonc.org/projects/global-cancer-project-map.

Bhatt, who directs global oncology at Stanford’s Center for Innovation in Global Health, and GO co-founder Franklin Huang, MD, PhD, an instructor at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, are working with the National Cancer Institute on ways to bring multidisciplinary teams together to solve complex challenges involving cancer treatment and care. While there are many dedicated scientists and caregivers doing innovative work in cancer in poor parts of the world, there’s been no single place where they could share knowledge or reference the work of their colleagues, she said. The cancer map is a first step in this process.

Bhatt and Huang unveiled the map March 25 at the Symposium on Global Cancer Research in Boston.

“We have the ambitious goal of providing access to every cancer research, care and outreach program in the world through the map,” Huang said.

A collaboration with the National Cancer Institute, the map was developed by GO volunteers, who are scientists, policymakers, public health experts, lawyers and other highly skilled individuals. It covers a wide range of projects, from prevention and screening to clinical programs and palliative care. For instance, it includes a project in Turkey to improve diagnostic accuracy of mammograms; development of an early screening test for gastric cancer in Mexico; and the use of supplements to prevent arsenic-induced skin cancer in Bangladesh.

“The map is an important and innovative step forward in our effort to reduce health disparities and strengthen human capital in underserved areas of the world,” said Michele Barry, MD, director of Stanford’s Center for Innovation in Global Health. “With cancer rates rapidly increasing in low-resource settings, the map creates a place where the global cancer community can share and access information that is critical to providing better treatment and care.”

Originally published at Stanford Medicine News Center