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Quality & Patient Safety

Commission on Cancer (CoC)

The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is an American College of Surgeons program that accredits cancer care facilities against quality standards spanning prevention, treatment, and survivorship. CoC accreditation signals comprehensive, multidisciplinary oncology care and requires data submission to a national cancer database.

What is the Commission on Cancer (CoC)?

The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is a program of the American College of Surgeons that accredits cancer care facilities against a defined set of quality standards. Those standards cover the full continuum of oncology care, from prevention and diagnosis through treatment and survivorship.

To earn and keep accreditation, a facility must meet these standards and contribute information to a national cancer database. The accreditation signals that an organization delivers comprehensive, multidisciplinary cancer care.

Why does CoC accreditation matter?

CoC accreditation gives patients and referrers a recognized marker of quality and coordination in cancer care. It reflects an organization's commitment to meeting external standards rather than relying on internal assurances alone.

The required data submission also feeds national cancer surveillance and benchmarking, which supports broader research and quality improvement. Accreditation thus benefits both the individual facility and the larger effort to understand and improve oncology outcomes.

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