St. Petersburg College president Carl M. Kuttler Jr., left, celebrates with University of Florida Dental School Dean Teresa Dolan and U.S. Rep. Bill Young, R-Indian Shores, who helped to secure a five-year, $5.3 million research grant. A portion of the funds will be targeted for the UF Dental School at the SPC Seminole campus.
SEMINOLE – The University of Florida College of Dentistry Wednesday announced that its clinic at the St. Petersburg College Seminole campus will be part of a five-year, $5.3 million research program aimed at increasing survival rates for low-income, minority men with head and neck cancer.
The research, which will concentrate on prevention and early detection, is funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
The announcement was made Oct. 22 at a ceremony at the Dennis L. Jones Seminole Community Library.
Participants included U.S. Rep. Bill Young, R-Indian Shores, a longtime supporter of UF dentistry; Carl M. Kuttler Jr., the president of St. Petersburg College who was instrumental in establishing a UF satellite dental clinic at the college; Larry Tabak, director, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research; Judy Sherman, director, Congressional Affairs, American Dental Association; Teresa Dolan, dean, UF College of Dentistry; and Henrietta Logan, professor, UF College of Dentistry.
“This is another example of how Bill Young has kept the best interests of Florida and of Pinellas County at the forefront,” Kuttler said.
Since 2005, the University of Florida College of Dentistry has operated a dental clinic serving about 18,000 residents of Pinellas County annually at SPC’s Seminole campus, 9200 113th St. N.
At the ceremony, Dolan said the university hopes to find the funding to offer a Doctor of Dental Medicine degree at the Seminole campus at some point.
The facility now trains residents and foreign-trained dentists and provides continuing education for practitioners.
The new UF research program is the first NIH-funded center to focus on head and neck cancer in the Southeast. Minority men suffer a disproportionate burden of death and impairment from head and neck cancers.
Each year, more than 11,000 people die because of head and neck cancers in the United States and 34,000 new cases are diagnosed.
It is the 10th leading cause of death among African-American men, who suffer twice the mortality of white men. In Florida, African-Americans are diagnosed at a younger age and more advanced disease stage compared with whites. Most African-American men will survive about 21 months after diagnosis while white men will survive about 40 months.
For some people, oral cancer begins with a mouth sore or perhaps a suspicious spot found by a dentist during a regular checkup. Patients generally need to see specialists for treatment, which forces them to deal with new doctors at an emotionally vulnerable time. Surgery for oral cancer is often disfiguring and radiation may cause loss of the ability to speak.
“As we talked with local residents, we learned about the negative impact on people’s lives,” said Logan. “We found that many community leaders, who were invited to meetings because of their community involvement, had been touched by this disease within their own families. They had stories of relatives who were diagnosed too late.”
The new multi-disciplinary center involves faculty from several colleges, incorporating techniques of participatory research involving community members at all steps from study design to dissemination of findings.
The main center will be at the College of Dentistry in Gainesville, and programs will extend to satellite clinics and rural locations throughout the state. The successful grant application was the result of collaboration with many professional associations and collaborative groups, including Florida A&M University, Alachua County Organization for Rural Needs and regional ministerial networks, officials said.
Several UF faculty members have distinguished records in research of head and neck cancers, and the center will provide an infrastructure for ongoing collaboration, according to Logan.