Skip to main content
An official website of the United States government

Consortium for Imaging and Biomarkers (CIB)

The Consortium for Imaging and Biomarkers (CIB) seeks to improve cancer screening, early detection of aggressive cancer, assessment of cancer risk, and cancer diagnosis by integrating imaging strategies with biomarkers into complementary approaches.

On This Page

  • All Heading 2s will automatically be pulled in to this list.
  • Do not edit the content on this template.

About the Consortium for Imaging and Biomarkers

The Consortium for Imaging and Biomarkers aims to integrate imaging strategies and biomarker methodologies into a singular complementary approach to cancer detection. Investigators Work in multi-disciplinary teams to perform collaborative studies, exchange information, share knowledge and leverage common resources.

Overdiagnosis (finding cancers that will never affect a person’s health) and false positives (test results that show cancer when none is there) present significant clinical problems in the prevention, detection and treatment of cancer. There is a need to more accurately identify early-stage aggressive cancers and distinguish lesions that are life threatening from those that are not.

The Consortium for imaging and Biomarkers Research Units develop, optimize, and clinically validate novel methods to:

  • Detect aggressive cancers at the earliest stages possible;
  • Reduce overdiagnosis;
  • Reduce false positive tests; and
  • Identify lethal cancers from non-lethal disease.

The goal of the Consortium for imaging and Biomarkers is to develop improved methods for the early detection of aggressive cancer by managing overdiagnosis, reducing false positives and identifying lethal cancers from non-lethal disease using strategies aimed at effective integration and validation of imaging and biomarkers.

Funding Opportunity

No matching Funding Opportunities were found.

View All Funding Opportunities

Grantee Details

PI Name Sort descending PI Organization Title Grant Number Program Official
Demb, Joshua Brian

University Of California, San Diego
United States

Optimal early colorectal cancer screening initiation 4R00CA267181-03 Claire Zhu, Ph.D.
Demehri, Shadmehr

Massachusetts General Hospital
United States

Immunosurveillance of breast glands with oncogenic germline mutations 5UG3CA290300-02 Altaf Mohammed, Ph.D.
Deng, Youping

University Of Hawaii At Manoa
United States

Circulating lipid and miRNA markers for early detection of breast cancer among women with abnormal mammograms 5R01CA230514-05 Christos Patriotis, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Deng, Gary E

University Of California-Irvine
United States

Acupuncture to Improve Outcomes in Patients with Sepsis: a Randomized Controlled Trial 7R21CA286330-03 Goli Samimi, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Deng, Jie

University Of Pennsylvania
United States

Placebo-Controlled Phase II Randomized Clinical Trial of Photobiomodulation Therapy in Head and Neck Cancer Survivors with Chronic Lymphedema 1R01CA289307-01A1 Brandy Heckman-Stoddard, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Dhakal, Soma

Virginia Commonwealth University
United States

Single-Molecule High-Confidence Detection of miRNA Cancer Biomarkers 5R61CA278445-03 Christos Patriotis, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Diaz, Juan Sebastian Gomez

University Of California At Davis
United States

A miniaturized neural network enabled nanoplasmonic spectroscopy platform for label-free cancer detection in biofluids 3R01CA273253-03S1 Nicholas Hodges, Ph.D.
Dickinson, Sally E

University Of Arizona
United States

Investigating novel targets for topical immunoprevention of keratinocytic skin cancer 1UG3CA290443-01A1 Altaf Mohammed, Ph.D.
Digirolamo, Gregory James

Univ Of Massachusetts Med Sch Worcester
United States

Increasing Nodule Detection in Lung Cancer by Non-Conscious Detection of "Missed" Nodules and Machine Learning 5R01CA269903-04
Doescher, Mark P

University Of Oklahoma Hlth Sciences Ctr
United States

Oklahoma Tribal, Rural, Urban Cancer Screening Trial ACCESS Hub 3UG1CA287044-02S1 Elyse LeeVan, M.D., M.P.H.
Doolittle, Gary C.

University Of Kansas Medical Center
United States

The University of Kansas Cancer Center's- MCA Rural NCORP- extension 3UG1CA239767-06S1 Brandy Heckman-Stoddard, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Doolittle, Gary C.

University Of Kansas Medical Center
United States

The University of Kansas Cancer Center's- MCA Rural NCORP- extension 3UG1CA239767-06S1 Brandy Heckman-Stoddard, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Drake, Richard R.

Medical University Of South Carolina
United States

Targeted Isolation and Identification of Sialylated Glycoproteins in Cancer Tissues, Cells and Biofluids 5R33CA267226-03
Drescher, Charles

Swedish Medical Center, First Hill
United States

The Pacific Cancer Research Consortium (PCRC), an NCORP Community Site 3UG1CA189953-11S1 Vanessa A. White, M.P.H.
Drescher, Charles

Swedish Medical Center, First Hill
United States

The Pacific Cancer Research Consortium (PCRC), an NCORP Community Site 3UG1CA189953-11S1 Vanessa A. White, M.P.H.

Program Contact(s)

Sudhir Srivastava, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Email: sudhir.srivastava@nih.gov

Guillermo Marquez, Ph.D.
Email: guillermo.marquez@nih.gov