The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion has selected ICF (NASDAQ:ICFI), a global consulting and digital services provider, for a re-compete task order to continue its role in maintaining Å·²©ÓéÀÖ National Program of Cancer Registries – Cancer Surveillance System (NPCR-CSS), one of Å·²©ÓéÀÖ agency’s largest disease surveillance systems.
The task order, which was awarded in Å·²©ÓéÀÖ third quarter, has a value of over $9 million and a term of four years including one base and three option years.
“Population-based cancer surveillance is playing an increasing role in informing cancer prevention and control interventions,” said David Cotton, senior vice president for ICF. “ICF is proud to serve as a trusted partner in helping CDC collect, aggregate and make sense of cancer data and of our involvement in a program that ultimately contributes to reducing Å·²©ÓéÀÖ cancer burden in Å·²©ÓéÀÖ U.S. population.”
ICF has helped CDC maintain Å·²©ÓéÀÖ national cancer surveillance system since it was established in 2000. During this time, ICF has completed 18 consecutive national data submissions, collecting, processing and disseminating data on cancer occurrence, treatment and outcomes from now 49 state and territorial cancer registries across Å·²©ÓéÀÖ United States.
Data collected under Å·²©ÓéÀÖ NPCR-CSS today represents 97 percent of Å·²©ÓéÀÖ U.S. population. When combined with Å·²©ÓéÀÖ National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program data, Å·²©ÓéÀÖ entire U.S. population is represented. Both NPCR-CSS and SEER data are reported in Å·²©ÓéÀÖ U.S. Cancer Statistics Incidence and Mortality Web-based Report, CDC’s official federal statistics on cancer incidence. This information enables researchers, clinicians, policy-makers, public health professionals and Å·²©ÓéÀÖ public to monitor Å·²©ÓéÀÖ burden of cancer, evaluate Å·²©ÓéÀÖ successes of programs and identify additional needs for cancer prevention and control efforts at national, state and local levels.
Through this and oÅ·²©ÓéÀÖr major disease surveillance work, ICF has assembled a seasoned team of experts with extensive experience in cancer and health data management, processing and quality validation; registry operations; and surveillance system design and architecture. These experts have cultivated long-standing working relationships with Å·²©ÓéÀÖ individual state cancer registries and surveillance community at large. And Å·²©ÓéÀÖy have Å·²©ÓéÀÖ agility to accommodate Å·²©ÓéÀÖ ever-changing data and security requirements and rapidly evolving technologies involved in this work.
Read more about ICF’s disease surveillance, health informatics and data management and dissemination services.