- Why was the Journal of the National Cancer Institute created by the National Cancer Institute (NCI)?
The original Journal of the National Cancer Institute was created by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in the 1940s to focus
attention specifically on cancer research by providing the first venue for publication of exclusively cancer-related scientific papers. The
journal's name was later changed officially to the name of JNCI. In the 1960s, NCI inaugurated a second journal, Cancer Treatment
Reports, dedicated to clinical cancer research. In 1987, NCI, under Director Vincent DeVita, M.D., decided to discontinue both JNCI
and Cancer Treatment Reports. In March 1988, initially designed as an experiment, NCI inaugurated a new Journal of the National
Cancer Institute, named to reflect the long lineage of scientific journal publications by NCI and to reflect the original name from the
1940s (this version was never referred to as 'JNCI'). The new Journal would be dedicated to the rapid publication of the
highest-quality cancer-related scientific papers from all areas of research.
- Who has been responsible for the editorial content of the Journal?
The new Journal of the National Cancer Institute was launched in March 1988 with Robert Wittes, M.D., then of NCI, as
editor-in-chief. As is characteristic of scientific journal publishing, the scientific content of the Journal has always been the exclusive
purview of its editor-in-chief, with advice from peer reviewers, associate editors, and journal staff. The internal Journal systems were at
first modeled on the methods used at Science, with the helpful cooperation and assistance of the Science staff, for manuscript
processing and review. The systems were later tailored to the specific needs of the Journal and became a model for other journals.
The new Journal also contained a news section that was originally developed by Paul van Nevel. It remained under his direction as the head
of the NCI Office of Cancer Communications until late in the more than 5-year Journal privatization process.
Julianne Chappell was the founding managing editor of the Journal and was responsible for setting editorial standards that emphasized clarity
of presentation and accessibility to a broad audience. Privatization of the Journal via a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement
(CRADA) grew out of her vision.
First Editor-in-Chief Robert Wittes, M.D., gave the Journal its current look. He instituted a rapid, rigorous peer review process, set a
high standard for study acceptance, and ensured that articles in the Journal would span the entire spectrum of cancer research and draw the
interest of scientists in many fields.
Daniel Ihde, M.D., the second editor-in-chief, expanded efforts to achieve high quality in terms of science and exposition and fostered
another innovation: the senior editor function. Senior editors with scientific and editorial expertise brought professional-level oversight to
bear on the development of every scientific paper from the point of receipt through the review and revision processes to the point of
publication. This function, modeled after systems used at a handful of the highest-level scientific journals worldwide, has been central to
the Journal's success. It was under Ihde's tenure that the Journal first reached the rank of number one primary cancer-research journal in the
world (determined on the basis of scientific citation) and surpassed a number of wide-circulation medical journals, including the Journal of
the American Medical Association. The third and current editor-in-chief is Barnett Kramer, M.D., formerly of NCI and currently head of the
Office of Disease Prevention at the National Institutes of Health. He began serving as editor-in-chief in 1994, continued the traditions of
selectivity, oversight, and high editorial standards, and has instituted statistical review of every paper with quantitative information.
Under his tenure, the Journal (now known as JNCI under the ownership of Oxford University Press) reached even higher status as a
frequently cited source of scientific information, ranking among the top biomedical journals in the world.
Over the 13 years the Journal was associated with the NCI, the editorial board changed and grew as well; it initially consisted primarily of
NCI scientists and subsequently grew to include scientists from outside NCI and eventually from outside the United States. These outside
scientists now represent a majority of the editorial board.
- What is the history of the CRADA between NCI and Oxford University Press?
Under the terms of a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement with NCI, which began in August 1996 and ran for about five years,
Oxford University Press (OUP) gradually took over responsibility for the Journal and became the sole owner at the end of the privatization
process. Throughout that process, each party to the agreement contributed a portion of the resources, with OUP assuming a greater portion as
time progressed. At the end of the CRADA, OUP assumed full ownership and all costs. The JNCI now is not supported nor controlled by
the U.S. government.
The two main goals of the CRADA were transfer and maintenance of the systems and standards responsible for the quality of the Journal and
the development of an enhanced online version of the Journal. The Journal has been available online since 1997, and full back contents are now
available online starting with 1996. The contents of the online Journal were identical to those in the printed version until 2002, when online
data supplements began to be added. The enhanced online version of the Journal, JNCI Cancer Spectrum, is now available at http://jncicancerspectrum.oupjournals.org.
JNCI Cancer Spectrum includes NCI's Physician Data Query (PDQ®) database; cancer statistics from NCI's Surveillance, Epidemiology,
and End Results program; a database of oncology drugs from the Physicians' Desk Reference; abstracts of Cochrane Reviews (systematic
evidence analyses) on cancer-related topics; an enhanced cancer news page; topical collections of "classic" (highly cited) articles (some with
accompanying perspective articles), review articles, and book reviews; a searchable calendar of events; and a collection of useful links to
cancer-related Web sites.
- Why is the magazine still called the Journal of the National Cancer Institute when it is solely owned by OUP?
The value of a journal is, in large part, in its name. Additionally, citation history carries
over on the basis of name and if the name changes, the citation history stops being included in citation reports. The CRADA was for the
purpose of privatizing the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, so NCI could not withhold the name.
- How did NCI fund the creation of the Journal?
The Journal was not produced with dedicated funding. It was produced with discretionary funds from the NCI Office of the Director.
- Why did NCI discontinue its financing of the Journal?
At the time the decision was made to transfer the Journal to the private sector, the Journal was produced in hard-copy form only. In order
to survive as a journal with the advent of the Internet, an electronic version was required. To produce both hard-copy and electronic
versions, the budget for the Journal would have to have been doubled or tripled.
NCI had to weigh the costs associated with producing both hard-copy and online versions of the Journal in view of competing priorities, and
it had to consider whether producing a peer-reviewed scientific journal was an activity the NCI should continue to engage in when journal
publishing is handled predominantly by the private sector. Ultimately, the decision was to discontinue NCI's funding and transfer
responsibility to a publisher outside the federal government who would be willing and able to maintain the quality of the Journal and,
therefore, its value to the cancer community.
- How can I contact the current staff of the JNCI?
To contact the JNCI, please call or write to:
Editorial Office:
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
8120 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 500
Bethesda, MD 20814-2743
Telephone: 301-841-1270
Fax: 301-841-1299
Reprints Requests:
For requests from industry and companies regarding bulk article reprints, sponsored subscriptions, translation opportunities for previously
published material, and corporate online opportunities, please email special.sales@oupjournals.org. More information is available on the Oxford
University Press Web site at www.oupjournals.org/sales.
Media Inquiries (reporters only)
Telephone: 301-841-1287
Email: jncimedia@oupjournals.org
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For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov or call NCI's
Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
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