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Funded Grants

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Transforming Palliative Care for People Living with Advanced Cancer: Developing a National Research Platform

Project Overview

Palliative care (PC) is an area of medicine that focuses on symptom control and quality of life of patients with life-limiting illnesses and their families. PC can be provided at any point in the cancer experience, even alongside cancer treatments. PC can improve symptoms and quality of life, but the effectiveness of PC is limited by the treatments available. While new cancer treatments have improved survival dramatically in the past 20 years, PC treatments are less effective and have changed little in the past 30 years.
We formed the Pan-Canadian Palliative Care Research Collaborative (PCPCRC) to advance knowledge and better meet the needs of advanced cancer patients and families. We propose to build a national research “platform” to conduct clinical trials that evaluate novel and promising symptomatic treatments. We will focus on psychological distress in this proposal because our people affected by cancer (PABC) partners identified this as a high priority area.
1. Develop the platform: We will establish 10 platform centres (“hubs”) across Canada that will enroll patients and caregivers into the platform. Enrolled participants can then choose which randomized control trial (RCTs) they wish to participate in.
2. Gather data: we will collect data that is meaningful to patients and caregivers to assess psychological distress and the impact of each intervention during their illness and into grief and bereavement.
3. Support and train: we will support and mentor trainees, researchers, staff, and PABC partners about clinical trials and impactful partner engagement.
If successful, this platform will allow us to perform research on any symptom associated with advanced cancer (e.g. pain, shortness of breath), and to rapidly disseminate and implement new treatments that are found to be effective. We will get results and transform practice more quickly, so we can improve the quality of life of patients and families living with advanced cancer.

Principal Investigator

James Downar , Bruyère Research Institute

Partners and Donors

Canadian Cancer Society

Project Ongoing

Transforming Palliative Care for People Living with Advanced Cancer: Developing a National Research Platform

  • Area of research

    Mental Health

  • Disease Area

    Brain Cancer,  Mental illness

  • Competition

    2024 CCS Breakthrough Team Grants - Transforming the future of metastatic cancer

  • Province

    Ontario

  • Start Date

    2025

  • Total Grant Amount

    $5,899,008

  • Health Canada Contribution

    $562,122

Contact Us

1200 McGill College Avenue
Suite 1600, Montreal, Quebec
H3B 4G7

+1 (514) 989-2989 info@braincanada.ca

Please note all online donations will receive an electronic tax receipt, issued by Brain Canada Foundation.

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Territorial acknowledgement

The offices of Brain Canada Foundation are located on the traditional, ancestral territory of the Kanien'kehá:ka Peoples, a place which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst nations. We honour and pay respect to elders past, present and emerging, and dedicate ourselves to moving forward in the spirit of partnership, collaboration, and reconciliation. In our work, we focus our efforts on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action, particularly those that pertain to improving health for Indigenous Peoples and that focus on advancing our own learning on Indigenous issues.

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