Cancer centers--origins and purpose. The James Ewing lecture
W. W. Shingleton
Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710.
Cancer centers in the United States date back to the beginning of this
century, although there were few until the late 1950s and 1960s. The
National Cancer Act of 1971 introduced a new era in serving as a major
stimulus to the development of comprehensive cancer centers. Research
scientists and physicians in centers have contributed significantly to the
new knowledge of normal and abnormal regulation of cell growth and
differentiation and to the advances in the diagnosis and treatment of
cancer. The future for cancer centers is very bright. They will continue to
play a major role in the advancement of knowledge about cancer. However,
centers must be reevaluated at intervals to correct any deficiencies and to
stimulate new and innovative approaches. Surgical oncologists should become
more involved in cancer center research. Comprehensive cancer centers
should develop more effective regional cancer control and prevention
programs. Reevaluation of centers by the National Cancer Institute,
Bethesda, Md, and its advisory body, the National Cancer Advisory Board,
along with cancer center leaders, should result in a consensus concerning
changes to enhance their contribution to a solution to the cancer problem.