45 Background: Models for survivorship care are often oncology-based. George Washington (GW) Adult Cancer Survivorship Clinic (ACS) has developed a unique, centralized model for survivorship care delivery staffed by internal medicine providers. The objective is to provide care to survivors that encompass the broad array of chronic issues they face, in addition to guidance on cancer surveillance and prevention. Methods: We implemented a centralized, primary care, consultative model of survivorship care, emphasizing care coordination. A personalized, evidence based survivorship care plan (SCP) is provided to each patient. Patients with complex needs may be seen for follow-up. A copy of the SCP is sent to the patient’s primary care provider (PCP). Referrals are made to our network of specialists within the GW system including: cardiology, neurology, weight management, genetic counseling, dermatology, physical therapy, integrative medicine, psycho-oncology, sexual health, and oncofertility. Referrals are tracked to specialty services using the electronic medical record (EMR). Results: Based on preliminary data, from January 2016 to October 2017, 261 cancer survivors were seen in the survivorship clinic. The majority were breast cancer survivors (166). Referral records were available for 225 patients. Most common were dermatology for baseline skin cancer screening (28%), physical therapy (16%), social work and psycho-oncology (15%), and weight management (15%). Conclusions: Our clinic is based on a primary care medical home model for each survivor, which includes care coordination and referral to specialty services. Limitations include inconsistent referral tracking methods with our EMR and incomplete data for all survivorship patients. Future research plans include assessing the impact of referrals on patient-reported outcomes and morbidity.