The Cancer Prevention and Control Program conducts the majority of cancer research
                           for the University of South Carolina with the aim of reducing the burden of cancer
                           across all communities in our state.
                        
                        
                           
                              The Cancer Prevention and Control Program was founded in 2003 to investigate and begin
                                 to alleviate the stark health disparities present in South Carolina, especially those
                                 resulting in higher cancer incidence and mortality rates in the African-American community
                                 in our state. Virtually all of the University of South Carolina's epidemiologic cancer
                                 research is conducted here at the Cancer Prevention and Control Program, and much
                                 of our work focuses on modifiable risk factors, such as diet and exercise. We strongly believe
                                 that community members, both here in Columbia and across the state, should be engaged
                                 with our researchers as equal partners, so that those individuals and communities
                                 most profoundly affected by cancer are engaged in work that will directly affect their
                                 lives. We are committed to integrating service, education and research in engaging
                                 the community to further our mission of reducing the burden of cancer in our state.
                               
                           
                              
                              
                                 
                                    
                                 
                                 Drs. James Hébert  , Lorne Hofseth   and Angela Murphy   were recently awarded a U01 Grant by the National Cancer entitled “REMEDY: Reducing Metabolic Dysregulation in Obese Parents and Child Dyads ” . The U01 project leverages the study team’s expertise in the epidemiology of colorectal
                                    cancer (CRC); disparities; obesity; metabolic dysregulation, an important manifestation
                                    of inflammation; the microbiome; animal CRC models; and lifestyle intervention trials
                                    to address the growing problem of Early-Onset CRC (EOCRC) (i.e., <50 years). Adiposity
                                    and diet drive metabolic dysregulation.