Investigator

Graham A Colditz

Chief, Division of Public Health Sciences · Washington University in Saint Louis, Surgery

About

GACGraham A Colditz
Papers(1)
Approaches to develop…
Collaborators(10)
Hawre JalalJennifer M YehNina A BickellShi-Yi WangSu-Hsin ChangThomas A TrikalinosYuliia SeredaChin HurEvan R. MyersFernando Alarid-Escud…
Institutions(9)
Indiana University Sc…Brown UniversityHarvard Medical SchoolIcahn School Of Medic…Yale UniversityBrown UniversityColumbia University I…Duke UniversityStanford University S…

Papers

Approaches to developing de novo cancer population models to examine questions about cancer and race in bladder, gastric, and endometrial cancer and multiple myeloma: the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network incubator program

Abstract Background We are developing 10 de novo population-level mathematical models in 4 malignancies (multiple myeloma and bladder, gastric, and uterine cancers). Each of these sites has documented disparities in outcome that are believed to be downstream effects of systemic racism. Methods Ten models are being independently developed as part of the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network incubator program. These models simulate trends in cancer incidence, early diagnosis, treatment, and mortality for the general population and are stratified by racial subgroup. Model inputs are based on large population datasets, clinical trials, and observational studies. Some core parameters are shared, and other parameters are model specific. All models are microsimulation models that use self-reported race to stratify model inputs. They can simulate the distribution of relevant risk factors (eg, smoking, obesity) and insurance status (for multiple myeloma and uterine cancer) in US birth cohorts and population. Discussion The models aim to refine approaches in prevention, detection, and management of 4 cancers given uncertainties and constraints. They will help explore whether the observed racial disparities are explainable by inequities, assess the effects of existing and potential cancer prevention and control policies on health equity and disparities, and identify policies that balance efficiency and fairness in decreasing cancer mortality.

2647Works
1Papers
10Collaborators

Positions

2006–

Chief, Division of Public Health Sciences

Washington University in Saint Louis · Surgery

1983–

Professor of Medicine

Brigham and Women's Hospital · Medicine

1983–

Researcher

Harvard Medical School Department of Medicine

1996–

Professor

Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health · Epidemiology

Education

1998

MD

University of Queensland School of Medicine · Social and Preventive Medicine

1986

DrPH

Harvard School of Public Health · Epidemiology

1982

MPH

Harvard School of Public Health · Epidemiology

1979

MBBS

University of Queensland School of Medicine

Keywords
Cancer Preventionbreast cancerimplementation science
Links & IDs
0000-0002-7307-0291home pageMendeley

Scopus: 57206520256

Researcher Id: A-3963-2009