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Common Cancers May Involve Fused Genes
New research suggests that gene fusion - the coming together of DNA from different parts of the genome - may be an important event in the development of common cancers.
Fused genes and the chromosomal rearrangements that cause them are a hallmark of leukemia, lymphomas, and other blood cancers, but they were not identified in a solid tumor until 2005. In a landmark study, Dr. Arul Chinnaiyan of the University of Michigan Medical School and his colleagues reported that 70 percent of prostate cancers may harbor fused genes.
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Trial Breaks New Ground in Collaborative Research
Last month a teenage girl from Indiana became the first patient enrolled in an important early-phase NCI clinical trial at the NIH Clinical Center. Diagnosed with an aggressive form of a rare cancer, hereditary medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), this young woman will help determine whether the investigational agent vandetanib may be the first effective nonsurgical treatment in young patients with this cancer.
The trial is significant for another reason. It's the first being conducted at the NIH Clinical Center under the joint leadership of an NIH intramural clinical investigator and an extramural scientist. Dr. Frank Balis, from the Pediatric Oncology Branch in NCI's Center for Cancer Research (CCR), is the principal investigator (PI), while Dr. Samuel Wells, from Washington University in St. Louis and one of the world's foremost MTC experts, is the adjunct PI.
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The NCI Cancer Bulletin is produced by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). NCI, which was established in 1937, leads the national effort to eliminate the suffering and death due to cancer. Through basic, clinical, and population-based biomedical research and training, NCI conducts and supports research that will lead to a future in which we can identify the environmental and genetic causes of cancer, prevent cancer before it starts, identify cancers that do develop at the earliest stage, eliminate cancers through innovative treatment interventions, and biologically control those cancers that we cannot eliminate so they become manageable, chronic diseases.
For more information on cancer, call 1-800-4-CANCER or visit http://www.cancer.gov.
NCI Cancer Bulletin staff can be reached at ncicancerbulletin@mail.nih.gov. |
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