P50CA271357
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Matches: Making Telehealth Delivery of Cancer Care at Home Effective and Safe - Project Summary/Abstract
The Matches (Making Telehealth Delivery of Cancer Care at Home Effective and Safe) Telehealth Research Center aims to build the evidence base necessary to establish best practices for telehealth-enabled cancer care. The overarching goal of the center is to create a research hub that generates evidence, trains investigators, and develops the research methods required to ignite the field of precision cancer care delivery.
Prior work demonstrates that oncology-focused telehealth can achieve favorable outcomes, but large-scale trials have been limited to specific contexts like palliative care or survivorship. Adoption has been constrained by restricted reimbursement. The Matches Center will help remediate this evidence gap by executing prospective trials, conducting observational analyses, and training transdisciplinary researchers.
Our research theme focuses on the integration of multi-layered data from telehealth platforms, patient portals, mobile tracking devices, and the electronic medical record to develop analytic methods that support personalized care. We aim to develop a new paradigm in oncology—precision delivery—with the ultimate goal of matching individual patients with the most beneficial combination of clinic-based or telehealth-supported home-setting care at the appropriate time—all based on the totality of dynamically available data.
We will accomplish this goal by applying data science methods—including nimble trial designs and machine learning—that have had limited application to telehealth to date. By establishing a research hub that nurtures investigators across disciplines and provides training, tools, data, analytic methods, and venues for sharing knowledge and building partnerships, we expect to accelerate progress in the science of care delivery.
Our specific aims are:
1) To conduct impactful pragmatic trials of telehealth in oncology.
2) To analyze a large existing cache of multidimensional observational data characterizing telehealth utilization and outcomes.
3) To train investigators and equip them with the skills necessary to innovate within an evidence-based framework.
4) To integrate telehealth with other data streams and create and apply analytic methods to transform the field of precision care delivery.
An administrative core will coordinate activities and engage feedback from internal and external stakeholders—including patients and the oncology workforce. Our clinical practice network serves as an innovation laboratory and comprises 7 outpatient clinics in NY and NJ with a shared informatics ecosystem including telehealth capacity, digital monitoring, and a highly trafficked patient portal. This will enable us to launch and execute a large pragmatic trial comparing in-person care to telehealth, with resources designed to support home-based care using a cluster-randomized design.
The Research & Methods Core will support the center by applying data science methods to extract and synthesize insights from telehealth and other data streams to develop methods relevant to advancing precision cancer care delivery and the goals of equity, efficacy, and efficiency to create an optimal experience for people being treated for cancer.
The Matches (Making Telehealth Delivery of Cancer Care at Home Effective and Safe) Telehealth Research Center aims to build the evidence base necessary to establish best practices for telehealth-enabled cancer care. The overarching goal of the center is to create a research hub that generates evidence, trains investigators, and develops the research methods required to ignite the field of precision cancer care delivery.
Prior work demonstrates that oncology-focused telehealth can achieve favorable outcomes, but large-scale trials have been limited to specific contexts like palliative care or survivorship. Adoption has been constrained by restricted reimbursement. The Matches Center will help remediate this evidence gap by executing prospective trials, conducting observational analyses, and training transdisciplinary researchers.
Our research theme focuses on the integration of multi-layered data from telehealth platforms, patient portals, mobile tracking devices, and the electronic medical record to develop analytic methods that support personalized care. We aim to develop a new paradigm in oncology—precision delivery—with the ultimate goal of matching individual patients with the most beneficial combination of clinic-based or telehealth-supported home-setting care at the appropriate time—all based on the totality of dynamically available data.
We will accomplish this goal by applying data science methods—including nimble trial designs and machine learning—that have had limited application to telehealth to date. By establishing a research hub that nurtures investigators across disciplines and provides training, tools, data, analytic methods, and venues for sharing knowledge and building partnerships, we expect to accelerate progress in the science of care delivery.
Our specific aims are:
1) To conduct impactful pragmatic trials of telehealth in oncology.
2) To analyze a large existing cache of multidimensional observational data characterizing telehealth utilization and outcomes.
3) To train investigators and equip them with the skills necessary to innovate within an evidence-based framework.
4) To integrate telehealth with other data streams and create and apply analytic methods to transform the field of precision care delivery.
An administrative core will coordinate activities and engage feedback from internal and external stakeholders—including patients and the oncology workforce. Our clinical practice network serves as an innovation laboratory and comprises 7 outpatient clinics in NY and NJ with a shared informatics ecosystem including telehealth capacity, digital monitoring, and a highly trafficked patient portal. This will enable us to launch and execute a large pragmatic trial comparing in-person care to telehealth, with resources designed to support home-based care using a cluster-randomized design.
The Research & Methods Core will support the center by applying data science methods to extract and synthesize insights from telehealth and other data streams to develop methods relevant to advancing precision cancer care delivery and the goals of equity, efficacy, and efficiency to create an optimal experience for people being treated for cancer.
Funding Goals
TO PROVIDE SUPPORT FOR INITIATIVES FUNDED UNDER THE 21ST CENTURY CURES ACT TO SUPPORT CANCER RESEARCH, SUCH AS THE DEVELOPMENT OF CANCER VACCINES, THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORE SENSITIVE DIAGNOSTIC TESTS FOR CANCER, IMMUNOTHERAPY AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF COMBINATION THERAPIES, AND RESEARCH THAT HAS THE POTENTIAL TO TRANSFORM THE SCIENTIFIC FIELD, THAT HAS INHERENTLY HIGHER RISK, AND THAT SEEKS TO ADDRESS MAJOR CHALLENGES RELATED TO CANCER.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New York,
New York
100656007
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 322% from $1,238,984 to $5,223,157.
Sloan-Kettering Institute For Cancer Research was awarded
Precision Cancer Care Delivery: Telehealth Research Center
Project Grant P50CA271357
worth $5,223,157
from National Cancer Institute in August 2022 with work to be completed primarily in New York New York United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.399 Cancer Control.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Centers on Telehealth Research for Cancer-Related Care (P50 Clinical Trial Required).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/24/25
Period of Performance
8/1/22
Start Date
7/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$5.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$5.2M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to P50CA271357
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
P50CA271357
SAI Number
P50CA271357-1720749700
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
75NC00 NIH National Cancer Institute
Funding Office
75NC00 NIH National Cancer Institute
Awardee UEI
KUKXRCZ6NZC2
Awardee CAGE
6X133
Performance District
NY-12
Senators
Kirsten Gillibrand
Charles Schumer
Charles Schumer
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0849) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $2,453,190 | 87% |
| Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0846) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $353,942 | 13% |
Modified: 9/24/25