A new collaborative cancer research effort between Harvard and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute will become the largest private cancer research initiative in the nation, Harvard Medical School (HMS) announced last week.
The Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center will fuse the cancer research efforts of seven Harvard-affiliated institutions: the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health and four Harvard-affiliated hospitals.
The seven institutions will pool more than $125 million in National Cancer Institute (NCI) grants each year, the largest sum of NCI money in the world, said David G. Nathan, president of Dana-Farber and the cancer center's director.
"This is really a massive collaborative effort," Nathan said.
"Nothing of this magnitude has ever been attempted at Harvard."
Each member institution has previously conducted separate basic, clinical, and population-based research.
Through their membership in the center, researchers from different institutions will now be able to coordinate efforts and share laboratory resources.
"[The goal is to]produce a cancer center without walls, one that has three times the firepower [of] the original one," Nathan said.
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