History
Established in 1824 as one of the nation’s first medical schools, the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) provides the most up-to-date care and biomedical research available in South Carolina and the Southeast. In an era of shrinking research dollars, the University has increased its research funds dramatically over the last decade, placing it in the upper tiers of medical schools in terms of research dollars with over $247 million in research funds in 2015.
The Hollings Cancer Center (HCC) at MUSC is among fewer than 75 cancer centers that have achieved recognition as a National Cancer Institute designated Cancer Center. It hosts the MUSC Department of Radiation Medicine in the main HCC building, with over 200,000 square feet of multidisciplinary clinics, research laboratories, conference facilities, and more. Core facilities include biostatistics support, flow cytometry and cell sorting, cell and molecular imaging, small animal imaging, tissue biorepository, gene targeting and knockout, lipidomics synthesis and analysis, cellular therapy, drug discovery and screening, and clinical trials support. HCC has over $50 million in research funding. Research programs include Cancer Biology & Immunology, Developmental Cancer Therapeutics, and Cancer Prevention and Control. U.S. News and World Report ranks MUSC Hollings Cancer Center as a high-performing cancer center.