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Cancer disparities researchers say changes in federal funding have disrupted their work

Cancer disparities researchers say changes in federal funding have disrupted their work

Cancer disparities cost lives, and researchers are struggling to understand what lies behind these gaps. Federal funding for this type of work has slowed since last year. Andrew Brookes/Image source/Getty Images hide title toggle title Andrew Brookes/Image source/Getty Images Why are some people more likely to get cancer and die from it than others? Rural

Scientist pipetting samples from a clinical trial into several wells

Cancer disparities cost lives, and researchers are struggling to understand what lies behind these gaps. Federal funding for this type of work has slowed since last year.

Andrew Brookes/Image source/Getty Images


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Andrew Brookes/Image source/Getty Images

Why are some people more likely to get cancer and die from it than others? Rural Americans, for example, are 18% more likely to die from cancer overall, and black women are 35% more likely to die from breast cancer than white women. This is according to a recent report from the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).

Cancer disparity researchers study these gaps and how to close them. Their work has contributed to reducing many disparities.

But the AACR report found that federal policy changes have affected about 93% of researchers surveyed in this field.

“Many medical trials stopped midway, meaning those patients suddenly didn’t receive the treatments they were receiving because funding stopped,” says Mariana Stern, professor of preventive medicine and urology at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and chair of the report committee.

The report is based on a survey of 122 researchers, including teachers, scientists and students. Seventy-eight percent said they had been unable to apply for funding and 59 percent said ongoing research projects were disrupted. And 59% of respondents said the funding they missed came from the National Institutes of Health, or NIH.

The report also points to data published in JAMA Oncology in November showing that in approximately the first half of 2025, the Trump administration canceled 181 grants from the National Cancer Institute, or NCI, a division of the NIH. The grants totaled more than $317 million, and many studied disparities.

In total, thousands of grants at the NIH were canceled in 2025, according to a nonprofit called Grant Witness that tracks cancellations and other changes in grant funding for scientific agencies. These funding cuts followed a January 2025 executive order calling for an end to “radical” and “wasteful” DEI research.

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