AHS AimsA variety of environmental factors may contribute to the increased incidence among farmers and other agricultural workers of certain cancers and other diseases. These include prolonged exposure to sunlight, dust, solvents, engine exhaust, fuels, oils, animal viruses, mycotoxins, contaminated drinking water, and pesticides. Of these many exposures, the potential link between pesticides and cancer has received the most attention to date, but there is also concern about other exposures and diseases. "The Agricultural Health Study is the capstone of a major area of research for DCEG," said Aaron Blair, Ph.D., Chief of OEEB and author of many scientific publications on the health effects of pesticides. "The prospective design, with detailed information on agricultural exposures and rural lifestyle factors and with biologic specimens to assess gene-exposure interactions, will allow evaluation of potentially hazardous chemicals that may impact the health of the general population as well as farm families." Researchers chose Iowa and North Carolina as study locations due to their strong agricultural sectors, diverse production methods, commodities, and products. The AHS began in 1993 with recruitment of the study cohort and collection of questionnaires with detailed information about farming, including types of crops grown, livestock raised, pesticide use, medical conditions, and lifestyle factors. The AHS team is now validating questionnaire-based exposure assessment with comprehensive field measurements of pesticides and continuing follow up for mortality and cancer incidence, collecting additional information by interview, and collecting buccal cells as a source of germline DNA. From now through 2008, the AHS will accrue more than 1 million person-years of follow up, and 5,000 incident cancer cases will be available for analysis. With the survey scheduled to continue through 2013, participants will be contacted to update information on exposures, collect data on selected disease outcomes, and continue follow up for mortality and cancer incidence. Researchers will focus on risk factors and mechanisms of disease action by integrating nested case-control studies with a variety of biological markers. New FindingsThe AHS has already yielded results on cancer and other outcomes. The first major cancer finding, published in the May 1, 2003, issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology, showed a 14 percent greater risk of developing prostate cancer among more than 55,000 male pesticide applicators. Elevated risks were seen for methyl bromide, which is used to fumigate soil and stored grains, and for chlorinated pesticides. The analysis also linked exposure to five other chemicals to an increased risk of prostate cancer among men with positive family histories. "Farming is the most consistent occupational risk factor for prostate cancer," Dr. Alavanja noted. "And this finding suggests that, for some men, a genetic predisposition to prostate cancer makes them especially susceptible when exposed to certain pesticides." |
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In a recent study of other disease endpoints, associations have been uncovered between fungicides and increased risk of macular degeneration, and several pesticides and respiratory wheeze. Next StepsAnalyses are now under way to evaluate the potential link between various classes of pesticides and cancers of the lung, breast, colon, ovary, and lymphatic tissues. As for the future, Dr. Alavanja said, "the AHS will help clarify if there is an association between pesticide exposure and cancer risk, an issue that has remained elusive since the 1940s. In the next 5 years, I foresee AHS generating definitive data on this issue as well as other exposures prevalent in the agricultural environment." For more information on the AHS, please visit http://www.aghealth.org/ -Jill Giannessi |
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DCEG researchers are playing key roles in developing a new assay that promises to greatly improve the accuracy, speed, and cost of measuring endogenous hormones in biologic samples. The method pairs high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with mass spectrometry (MS), a combination, called LC-MS, that has not been used to measure steroid hormones. "For decades, researchers in hormonal carcinogenesis have been aware that more accurate and efficient methods of measuring endogenous levels of hormones and hormone metabolites were needed to advance the field," said Robert Hoover, M.D.,Dr.P.H., Director of the Epidemiology and Biostatistics Program in DCEG. "This method is likely to be a leap forward, not only for cancer research but also for myriad medical conditions related to steroid hormones. In addition, quantifying estrogen exposure and metabolism by this method may identify women at high risk of breast cancer more accurately than the questionnaire-based risk factors currently used." Commercial kits now used to measure endogenous estrogens rely on immunoassays and have poor specificity due to antibody cross-reactivity and large variability due to changing lots and sources.With these kits, each estrogen or estrogen metabolite is measured separately; each analyte costs around $100 and requires between 0.2 ml and 1.0 ml of sample. In contrast, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS), which has been considered the gold standard, is a direct and more accurate method for measuring hormones. GCMS requires extensive, laborious, timeconsuming sample preparation, however, and is not only expensive—on the order of $1000 per single analysis—but can require 10 ml or more of sample from each subject. A year would be required to assay 500 samples. Such constraints limit the application of these techniques to epidemiology studies. "Cancers of the breast, ovary, endometrium, and prostate are all likely to be related to endogenous levels of steroid hormones, while other sites, such as colon, gallbladder, testis, and thyroid, may be associated as well," said Regina Ziegler, Ph.D., M.P.H., senior investigator in DCEG. "An accurate and efficient way to measure circulating and tissuespecific hormone levels could advance our understanding of the etiology of these cancers and lead to improvements in prevention and treatment." The challenge of developing a highly sensitive, accurate, reliable, and rapid method for measuring endogenous estrogens and their metabolites in biological samples intrigued Xia Xu, B.M., Ph.D., who joined the Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch (HREB) in 2000 as a postdoctoral fellow. Dr. Xu, who holds degrees in medicine and toxicology, had previously measured estrogens and phytoestrogens using GC-MS. "LC-MS is an amazingly powerful tool for separating, identifying, and measuring compounds with very similar structures," noted Dr. Xu."However, MS only detects ionized—or charged—molecules, and estrogens, which are fatsoluble, are not charged." Larry Keefer, Ph.D., an organic chemist and Chief of the Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis at the NCI Center for Cancer Research, offered Dr. Xu laboratory space and supplies so he could start his LC-MS experiments. Drs. Xu, Keefer, and Ziegler realized they faced two hurdles: first, finding a chemical derivatization that would add charge to the neutral estrogens, and second, identifying a way to completely separate individual estrogen metabolites, many of which share the same molecular weight and similar MS fragmentation patterns. To further complicate the situation, the techniques needed to work in complex biological matrices, with limited quantities of material, and in a manner that was robust and simple enough to be automated. To solve the first problem, the team evaluated various chemical techniques for quantitatively adding bulky charged moieties to each estrogen metabolite. Eventually, they found something that worked—adding a hydrazone at the C-17 carbonyl group of catechol estrogens. This approach is so novel that the NCI Technology Transfer Branch decided to apply for patent coverage for this work. Another derivatization is being developed to facilitate analysis of hormones that do not have C-17 carbonyl groups. The second problem was solved by pairing LC with MS because LC requires very little sample, can separate charged molecules, and takes advantage of rapidly emerging technology. The LC-MS combination has proven so successful that all 16 common estrogens and estrogen metabolites in urine can be measured in 30 minutes with less than half a milliliter of sample. Because of the technique’s sensitivity, Dr. Xu has been able to isolate and describe a urinary estrogen metabolite not previously reported in non-pregnant women. The research team published details of their technique in the November 2002 issue of the Journal of Chromatography B; a second paper with more details is being submitted for publication. The researchers initially focused on urine samples, which contain fewer interfering substances than serum or plasma. They anticipate, however, that the technique will be applicable to plasma, serum, and possibly tissue. A modified approach should work with androgens, phytoestrogens, and estrogens. Similar LC-MS methodology may also apply to separating, identifying, and measuring structurally similar peptide hormones such as prolactins and insulin-like growth factors. "This technique could be immediately applicable to a number of DCEG studies that are measuring endogenous hormone levels," said Louise Brinton, Ph.D., Chief of HREB. Although enthusiasm among the investigators is high, work is still needed to determine the method’s ultimate utility. In addition to extending the method to blood and tissue samples, robotic procedures must be developed to enable high throughput. Validity, reliability, and sensitivity must be demonstrated with large numbers of field samples, and the ultimate cost per sample needs to be determined. To expedite this research, Dr. Xu has moved to the new Laboratory of Proteomics and Analytical Technologies (LPAT) at NCI-Frederick, where he will be able to use powerful mass spectrometry equipment and the expertise of scientists specialized in this field. The DCEG hormone measurement project has become an important part of small molecule mass spectrometry research in LPAT. "While proteomics dominates the research conducted within the LPAT at present, we fully understand the need for measuring small molecules since metabolites as well as proteins play a critical role in cancer etiology," says Timothy Veenstra, Ph.D., the LPAT Director. "Continuing developments in the field of mass spectrometry will enable us to measure small molecules directly, quantitatively, and rapidly at levels of sensitivity previously not possible." -Maria Sgambati, M.D. |
DCEG FELLOWS TAKE HOME NIH RESEARCH AWARDSIn October, four DCEG scientists received NIH Fellows Awards for Research Excellence (FARE). The awards recognize outstanding scientific research by fellows in the NIH intramural research program. To enter, fellows must submit abstracts of their research, which are peer reviewed by a blinded study section. Competition was stiff this year, with more than 1,000 fellows applying for the award and less than 25 percent of applicants receiving an award. In the Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, Juan Alguacil, M.D., won for his work relating urinary pH and cigarette smoking to bladder cancer risk, and Lifang Hou, M.D., Ph.D., for her project on the risk of colorectal adenomas in relation to smoking and CYP1A1 and NQO1 polymorphisms. Elizabeth Brown, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Viral Epidemiology Branch, was recognized for her study evaluating determinants of human herpesvirus-8 viremia in the general population, and Michael Hauptmann, Ph.D., of the Biostatistics Branch, for his work examining mortality from lymphoproliferative malignancies among workers in the formaldehyde industry. Begun in 1995, the FARE competition is sponsored by the NIH Fellows Committee, the NIH Scientific Directors, the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health, and the NIH Office of Education. Winners receive a travel stipend to attend a scientific meeting, at which they present their papers in a symposium or poster session. |
DCEG staff members won several individual and group awards at the annual NCI ceremony held October 9th. Robert Hoover,M.D., Sc.D., received the NCI Director’s Gold Star, a new award this year that recognizes a special accomplishment that advances the NCI agenda in a significant or meaningful way. Dr. Hoover was acknowledged for his leadership in adhering to a scientific focus during the NCI Workshop on Early Reproductive Events and Breast Cancer. NIH Merit Awards went to eight DCEG researchers. In the Biostatistics Branch, Nilanjan Chatterjee, Ph.D., won for his work in developing new designs and analysis methods for epidemiologic research, and Ruth Pfeiffer, Ph.D., was recognized for her innovative statistical methods that enhance the usefulness of genetic and molecular data in epidemiologic research. Ethel Gilbert, Ph.D., of the Radiation Epidemiology Branch, was recognized for her landmark research on second cancers, thyroid cancer risks associated with I-131 fallout, and cancer risks among nuclear and electrical utility workers, and Gladys Glenn, M.D., Ph.D., of the Genetic Epidemiology Branch (GEB), won for her clinical expertise in the investigation and care of high-risk families with renal cancers. Andrew Bergen, Ph.D., was recognized for developing the design specifications and overseeing the implementation of a laboratory information management system for the NCI Core Genotyping Facility. Jorge Toro, M.D., of the GEB, won a Public Health Service Commendation Medal for his work on hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) and the Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome. |
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DCEG is hosting two medical students who are part ofthe prestigious Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program. Randi Cohen, from the State University of New York at Stony Brook, is working in the Radiation Epidemiology Branch (REB); Michelle Khan, from the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ), is in the Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch (HREB). Ms. Khan's experience with HHMI dates back to her undergraduate years at Duke University, when she spent a summer in the Howard Hughes Research Fellows Program working in biochemistry and structural molecular biology. After graduating cum laude with a double major in chemistry and Spanish, she began an M.D./M.P.H. program at UMDNJ. Her interest in epidemiology developed during the summer between her first and second year of medical school when she did clinical research on uterine fibroids with Dr. Gloria Bachmann at the Women's Health Institute, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. "I enjoyed my time doing research that summer," said Ms. Khan. "I wanted to explore epidemiologic research in more depth as a potential career path, which is why I chose to apply to the HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program." Ms. Khan is spending her year at DCEG investigating human papillomavirus (HPV) natural history and diagnostics with Mark Schiffman, M.D., M.P.H. Approximately 5-20 HPV subtypes cause cervical cancer, and Ms. Khan is trying to clarify the role of HPV types with low etiologic fractions using data from DCEG cohort studies. By analyzing which combination of types should be assayed, she hopes to understand how to maximize the tradeoff between screening sensitivity and specificity. When asked about Ms. Khan, Dr. Schiffman responded enthusiastically. "Michelle is so smart that it's a pleasure to introduce her to topics I love," he said. "She likes statistical thinking, which will color the rest of her medical training. I hope she returns here someday." Ms.Khan agrees that the year has been a wonderful experience so far. "I have learned a great deal in the 4 months since starting at DCEG. The mentoring here is unparalleled in my experience...the HPV group is very enthusiastic about letting junior researchers take part in projects and generous when it comes to teaching." Ms. Khan has also taken the opportunity to explore issues in clinical epidemiology and genetics. Through the mentorship of Mark H. Greene, M.D., in the Clinical Genetics Branch, she shadows staff members, including Jennifer Loud, M.S.N., C.R.N.P., Gladys Glenn, M.D., Ph.D., and June Peters, M.S., C.G.C., during visits to their clinics. Ms. Cohen, the second HHMI scholar, attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), receiving bachelor's (2000) and master's (2001) degrees in nuclear engineering. The research topic for her undergraduate thesis was "Shielding Reduction Factors for the MIT Nuclear Reactor Lab," and she became licensed as a senior reactor operator. For her master's degree, Ms. Cohen worked on a joint project involving the nuclear and environmental engineering departments to study bacterial reduction of uranium and plutonium. During this period, she realized that she was more interested in the medical uses of radiation and decided to pursue an M.D. degree. During her first 2 years of medical school, Ms. Cohen developed an interest in biomedical research, which prompted her to apply to the HHMI-NIH program. After being accepted, she began searching for a group that worked on challenging projects and offered a supportive research environment with good mentorship. Hoping to combine nuclear engineering and medicine, she selected REB because the "branch goals were very similar to my own interests. The REB also provided a variety of interesting projects, dedication to teaching and mentorship, and enthusiasm for their work." Ms. Cohen is working on several cancer survivorship projects that focus on second primary cancers. Under the mentorship of Lois Travis, M.D., Sc.D., Ms. Cohen is conducting a long-term follow-up study of more than 40,000 men with testicular cancer from several international cancer registries, and analytic studies of second cancers following malignancies of the stomach and pancreas. These investigations will provide important new information about the role of radiation and chemotherapy dose, especially cisplatin, and their interactions in the development of secondary cancers. Ms. Cohen is also working with Rochelle Curtis, M.A., Peter Inskip, Sc.D., and Joseph Fraumeni, M.D., to quantify the risk of second cancers in childhood cancer patients treated for soft tissue sarcoma, and is helping write a chapter on this topic for the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Multiple Primary Cancer Monograph. "My experience so far has been amazing," said Ms. Cohen. "I greatly enjoy working in DCEG and especially working with wonderful, dedicated individuals who are happy to offer their experience and mentorship." Her NCI mentors welcome her enthusiastic approach, comprehensive background in radiation, and ability to quickly comprehend epidemiologic issues. "Randi’s input into epidemiologic studies to date has been extraordinarily helpful and highly valued," noted Dr. Travis. "Given her unique talents, we hope that she decides to pursue a career in cancer epidemiology." The HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program was established in 1985 to give outstanding students at U.S. medical and dental schools the opportunity to receive research training at NIH. Research scholars spend 9 months to a year at NIH, conducting basic, translational, or applied biomedical research under the mentorship of senior NIH research scientists. This year, the program received 179 applications and accepted 42 students. Students can choose from 1,200 tenured or tenure track intramural scientists working on more than 2,500 research projects in six primary areas of interest: neuroscience, cell biology, structural biology, immunology, epidemiology/biostatistics, and genetics. "Although the basic science areas tend to be quite popular, I think a growing number of medical students are becoming interested in the field of epidemiology and public health," noted Ms. Khan. For more information on the HHMI-NIH program, please visit http://www.hhmi.org/. -Rochelle Curtis, Mark Schiffman, and Lois Travis |
RADIATION EPIDEMIOLOGY SHORT COURSE AND LECTURE SERIESUnder the direction of Peter Inskip, Sc.D., the Radiation Epidemiology Branch will offer a short course from May 4 to 14 on a variety of topics in radiation epidemiology. Speakers include NCI staff and scientists from other government agencies and academic institutions. The course is intended for those who have epidemiology backgrounds and are interested in the health effects of exposure to radiation, particularly the relationship between ionizing radiation and cancer. The course is free but advance registration is required. The program offers an overview of the radiation epidemiology field with a focus on radiation-related cancer. It begins with basic radiation physics, dosimetry, radiation chemistry, and radiobiology, and continues with presentations on epidemiologic studies of radiation-exposed populations, including atomic bomb survivors in Japan, medically irradiated populations, and persons with occupational or environmental radiation exposures. Methods for quantifying radiation risks, the use of such information in setting radiation protection standards, and risk communication also will be discussed. The course focuses on ionizing radiation but also considers nonionizing radiation. Throughout the course, instructors will stress the importance of radiation dosimetry in epidemiologic studies and highlight key methodologic issues, including challenges in the study of low-dose effects. Possible new sources of radiation exposure and their potential risks will be covered. For more information on the Radiation Epidemiology Course, please visit: /epicourse.html. |
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Janet D. Rowley, M.D., delivered the Rosalind E. Franklin Award Lecture for Women in Cancer Research, which was given at the annual NCI Combined Retreat in January. Dr. Rowley is renowned for seminal discoveries at the University of Chicago, linking chromosomal translocations to the development of leukemia. The NCI prize honors the commitment of women in cancer research and is given in tribute to Dr. Franklin, who played a central role in the discovery of the DNA double helix. Dr. Rowley was introduced by Martha Linet, M.D., M.P.H, Chief of the Radiation Epidemiology Branch. The second honorary lecture at the retreat was the Alfred G. Knudson Award Lecture in Cancer Genetics. This prize is given in tribute to Dr. Knudson, who developed mathematical models that revolutionized the understanding of the genetic basis of cancer. Dr. Knudson served at NCI in the late 1990s and continues to participate each year in the retreat. This year’s recipient was Nobel Laureate Leland H.Hartwell, Ph.D., President of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. He was honored for pioneering genetic and molecular studies uncovering the regulation of cell division. NCI Director Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach introduced Dr.Hartwell. |
MENTORING FOCUS OF ANNUAL ETHICS TRAININGThe fourth annual NIH training workshops on the responsible conduct of research focused on mentoring issues. The training, which is based on case studies, is required by all NIH employees involved in research and has previously covered issues related to scientific misconduct and authorship. This year’s case study prompted thoughtful discussions about the impact of different mentoring styles, the need for mentoring throughout one’s career, and the importance of training in good mentoring skills. Ten DCEG staff members served as facilitators for the sessions. Recognition and appreciation for volunteering their time and skills to facilitate the discussions go to: Chitra Mohla, M.S., Melinda Butsch-Kovacic, Ph.D., Joseph Coble, Sc.D., Joanne Colt, M.P.H., M.S., Dalsu Baris, M.D., Ph.D., Michie Hisada, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., Allan Hildesheim, Ph.D., Ursula Leitzmann, M.A., and Sheree Hawkins. Resources related to mentoring are available in the library (located in Suite 350 in EPS) and on the following Web sites: NIH Guide to Training and Mentoring National Academy of Sciences: Advisor, Teacher, Role Model and Friend Science Magazine: Next Wave – Search on ‘mentoring’ /newsletter/News1298.html -Kristin Kiser, M.H.A |
Last October, cancer researchers and administrators from around the country gathered at the NIH campus to mark the 30th anniversary of the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program, better known as the SEER Program. The day of celebration included a mini-symposium with a seminar on health services and outcome research, and brief addresses from leaders in the cancer surveillance field. Cancer pattern surveillance is the foundation of the SEER network. It has been the primary means of measuring the national burden of cancer through incidence, survival statistics, and evaluation of the impact of cancer risk factors. The celebration emphasized the program’s scientific contributions to cancer control and public health in the United States and internationally, and honored those who have made such advances possible. In addition, the SEER registries were recognized for their remarkable commitment to high-quality data collection and development of innovative methodologies in analysis. Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr., M.D., DCEG Director, received an individual award recognizing his contributions to the SEER Program. "Today, SEER stands as the model and standard of excellence for cancer registries, both on a national and international scale," said Dr. Fraumeni. "Visionary in concept, SEER has earned its name with an unprecedented ability to identify emerging trends, geographic variation, ethnic disparities, and other patterns that have provided new directions for epidemiologic research in cancer etiology and control." In addition to Dr. Fraumeni’s award, DCEG was acknowledged for its contributions to SEER’s landmark studies, including the coordination of multicenter case-control studies, the Agricultural Health Study, the study of second cancers, the survey of multiple primary cancers, and the development of cancer mortality maps depicting geographic variation at the county level. Begun by NCI in January 1973, SEER first collected data on cancer incidence and survival in Connecticut, Iowa, New Mexico, Utah, and Hawaii, and in Detroit and San Francisco-Oakland. The registry gradually expanded to include several other regions of the country. SEER registries routinely collect data on patient demographics, primary tumor site, morphology, stage at diagnosis, first course of treatment, and follow up for vital status from 14 population-based cancer registries and 3 supplemental registries covering approximately 26 percent of the U.S. population. Information on more than 3 million in situ and invasive cancer cases is included in the SEER database, and approximately 170,000 new cases are added each year in the SEER coverage areas. "The recent expansion of SEER has greatly enhanced its value to the research community," said Dr. Robert Croyle, Director of NCI’s Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences, which manages SEER. "Brenda Edwards and her team have done a remarkable job of improving the usability of SEER data and collaborating with DCEG and others to ensure that surveillance data inform both research and policy." For more information, please visit: http://seer.cancer.gov/anniversary/. -Maria Sgambati, M.D. |
NEW REPRESENTATIVES TO NIH FELLOWS COMMITTEERobin Wilson, Ph.D., Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, and Margaret Wright, Ph.D., Nutritional Epidemiology Branch, have been selected as the new DCEG representatives to the NIH Fellows Committee (FELCOM). Dr. Wright will also serve as Chair of the FELCOM mentoring subcommittee. FELCOM is composed of fellows from each NIH Institute and enhances their training experience. Thanks to outgoing FELCOM representatives Abhijit Dasgupta, Ph.D. (Biostatistics Branch), and Sam Mbulaiteye, M.D. (Viral Epidemiology Branch), for their service on behalf of DCEG, NCI, and NIH. For more information on FELCOM, please visit: http://felcom.nih.go. |
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Family History of Cancer and Glioma Risk (full
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No Link Between Simian Virus 40 and AIDS-Associated
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Polymorphisms in DNA Repair Genes Alter Risk of
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YALE UNIVERSITY AWARDED FIRST TRAINING GRANT Yale University was awarded the first NCI Graduate Partnership Program TU2 training grant in Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics. DCEG will partner with Yale’s Department of Epidemiology and Public Health to develop the training program, which supports tuition and dissertation research by predoctoral students training in the epidemiology of nutritional, environmental, and occupational determinants of cancer. The partnership will include coursework at Yale coupled with summer training at NCI. Once coursework is complete, dissertation research will be conducted at NCI under the guidance of DCEG and Yale investigators, and Yale will award the doctoral degree. At NCI, Demetrius Albanes, M.D., leads the partnership as head of the DCEG Office of Education, assisted by steering committee members Aaron Blair, Ph.D., Chief of the Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, and Arthur Schatzkin, M.D., Dr.P.H., Chief of the Nutritional Epidemiology Branch. At Yale, Dr. Susan Mayne, Associate Professor of epidemiology and public health, serves as principal investigator for the grant. Interested students may contact Dr. Albanes at daa@nih.gov or phone 301-594-2869, or Dr. Mayne at susan.mayne@yale.edu or phone 203-785-6274. |
Low Doses of Ionizing Radiation and Cancer Risk
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Michael Alavanja, Ph.D., Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch (OEEB), spoke on "Cancer incidence in the Agricultural Health Study cohort" at the International Society of Environmental Epidemiology meeting in Perth, Australia, last September. Andrea Baccarelli, M.D., Ph.D., Genetic Epidemiology Branch (GEB), received his doctoral degree in Occupational and Environmental Health from the University of Milan, Italy, last November. Dr. Baccarelli’s dissertation project, "The aryl-hydrocarbon receptor pathway and dioxin toxic effects in humans: Molecular epidemiology investigations on the Seveso population," was based on research conducted at DCEG in collaboration with Maria Teresa Landi, M.D., Ph.D. (GEB). Dr. Baccarelli is leaving DCEG to become Assistant Professor in the Department of Occupational and Environmental Health at the University of Milan, Italy.
Louise Brinton, Ph.D., Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch (HREB), spoke on "Causes of infertility and ovarian cancer risk" at the annual meeting of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine in October in San Antonio, TX.
Philip Castle, Ph.D., M.P.H. (HREB), gave a talk in September on "Cervical cancer risk factors and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines" at the Latin American Federation of Oncology Societies Symposia on Cervical Cancer, in Córdoba, Argentina. Wong-Ho Chow, Ph.D. (OEEB), spoke on the epidemiology of renal cancer at the Society of Urologic Oncology meeting held in Bethesda,MD, last December; Lee Moore, Ph.D. (OEEB), spoke on the epidemiology of bladder cancer at the same meeting. Amanda Cross, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in the Nutritional Epidemiology Branch (NEB), received a Scholar-in-Training travel award from the Molecular Epidemiology Group of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR). Dr. Cross was recognized for her study, "Heterocyclic amines formed in meat cooked at high temperatures may increase prostate cancer risk," based on data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer (PLCO) Study.
James Goedert, M.D. (VEB), spoke on "Overview on the infectious causes of cancer" and "Kaposi sarcoma and other cancers associated with HIV/AIDS and Kaposi Sarcoma Herpes Virus (KSHV)" at the American Society of Clinical Oncology "Meet the Experts" session for journalists in New York City last December. At the same meeting, Charles Rabkin, M.D. (VEB), spoke on “Helicobacter pylori and gastric cancer." Mark H. Greene, M.D., Clinical Genetics Branch (CGB), spoke on "Surgical risk reduction and ovarian screening in the management of women at increased genetic risk of ovarian cancer" at the McGee Women’s Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA, in September, and at Case-Western Reserve Cancer Center in Cleveland, OH, in November.
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Neil Caporaso, M.D., and Lynn Goldin, Ph.D. (GEB), organized the second meeting of the International Familial Chronic Lymphocytic (CLL) Consortium, held in October during the 10th International Workshop on CLL in Stresa, Italy. At the meeting, Dr. Caporaso spoke on "What do we understand from familial CLL," and Dr. Goldin spoke on "Familial risk of lymphoproliferative tumors in families of patients with CLL: Results from the Swedish family cancer database." Drs. Caporaso and Goldin were also invited to the Mayo Clinic last December to speak on the genetics of familial CLL. |
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Roxana Moslehi, Ph.D. (GEB), gave invited presentations last October on cancer risks associated with DNA repair genes at the Graduate School of Public Health at the University of Pittsburgh and at the Georgetown University Lombardi Cancer Center. Dilys Parry, Ph.D. (GEB), was appointed Vice-Chair of the NCI Special Studies Institutional Review Board (IRB). Dr. Parry has served on the IRB since 1995. Michael Alavanja, Ph.D. (OEEB), will join the IRB as a new member.
REB scientists Elaine Ron, Ph.D., and Andre Bouville, Ph.D., served as Chair and Executive Secretary, respectively, of the second international Chornobyl thyroid cancer working group held in Geneva last December. Maureen Hatch, Ph.D., and Ihor Masnyk, Ph.D. (REB), also participated. The working group aims to improve the quality of data in all Chornobyl-related studies of thyroid disease. Drs. Bouville, Hatch, and Ron also served as expert advisors to the Chornobyl Forum, a group formed in 2003 to communicate objective, scientifically sound information about the health effects of the nuclear accident. The Forum’s first meeting, which explored the current scientific assessment of thyroid disease risk in children and adults exposed to radiation, was held at the World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland, last December. Nathaniel Rothman, M.D., M.P.H., M.H.S. (OEEB), gave an invited presentation on "Human genome epidemiology" at the Korean National Cancer Prevention Center, Seoul, Korea, last December.
Patricia Stewart, Ph.D. (OEEB), gave three invited presentations at Central Missouri State University last October on a variety of topics, including managing complex occupational safety and health studies and exposure assessment for epidemiologic research. Margaret Tucker, M.D. (GEB), gave an invited talk on "Risk factors for cutaneous malignant melanoma" at the 3rd Euroskin Conference in Stockholm, Sweden, last September. Dr. Tucker also spoke on "Genetic epidemiology of melanoma" at the All Ireland Cancer Conference, in Cork, Ireland, last October, and on "Genetic susceptibility and risk of melanoma" at the Perspectives in Melanoma VI meeting in Miami, FL, last November. Roel Vermeulen, Ph.D. (OEEB), gave invited talks on "Exposure assessment in occupational epidemiology" and "Data-driven exposure assessment" at the International Symposium on Evaluation of Occupational Exposures to Carcinogens last October in Sao Paolo, Brazil.
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Kenneth Adams, Ph.D., has joined the Nutritional Epidemiology Branch (NEB) as a postdoctoral fellow. Dr. Adams earned his Ph.D. in epidemiology at the University of Washington in Seattle in 2003. His dissertation research, conducted at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, addressed whether soy isoflavones altered serum and tissue biological markers in a randomized intervention trial. In DCEG, he will study links between energy balance and cancer and the mechanisms by which obesity and physical activity affect the risk of various cancers, including alterations of circulating growth factors and cytokines.
Sonja Berndt, Pharm.D., has joined OEEB as a doctoral student in the Department of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Dr. Berndt received a B.A. in English literature from Dartmouth College in 1994 and a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Michigan in 1999. She will conduct research for her dissertation using data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer cohort study.
Elizabeth Challenor-Reese recently left HREB to accept a position in the Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
Eric Chen, Ph.D. (BB), has joined DCEG as a postdoctoral fellow. Dr. Chen received his doctoral degree in biostatistics from the University of Waterloo in October 2003. His thesis, "Methods for the Analysis of Interval-Censored Multi-Type Event History Data," was recognized with the Ph.D. Comprehensive Award and the D.A. Sprott Award for best thesis proposal in a calendar year. At DCEG, Dr. Chen will continue his research in survival analysis and is working with Dr. Philip S. Rosenberg to develop methods for tackling multiple-comparison problems in genetic association studies based on large-scale analyses of single nucleotide polymorphisms and haplotypes.
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INDIA HEALTH STUDY MEETING TAKES PLACELast September, NEB researchers Tanuja Rastogi, Ph.D., Arthur Schatzkin, M.D., Dr.P.H., and Rashmi Sinha, Ph.D., organized and hosted the India Health Study and Rare Cancers in India Meeting in Rockville, MD. Approximately 30 scientists from India, NCI, and other U.S. institutions were invited to discuss issues related to implementing the India Health Pilot Study. The study aims to elucidate dietary patterns and other lifestyle risk factors in relationship to cancer risk. Topics included endpoint ascertainment, strengths and weaknesses of different Indian registries, details of study questionnaires, and biological sampling and analysis issues. The India Health Pilot Study steering committee includes Sholom Wacholder, Ph.D. (BB), and Drs. John Potter (University of Washington), Elio Riboli and Rengaswamy Shankarnarayanan (International Agency for Research on Cancer), and Walter Willett (Harvard School of Public Health). The rare cancers portion of the meeting provided an overview of current cancer epidemiology in India. The meeting was partly funded by the NIH Office for Rare Diseases. |
Timothy J. Jorgensen, Ph.D., M.S., will spend a sabbatical year in the Radiation Epidemiology Branch (REB). Dr. Jorgensen, an associate professor in the Department of Radiation Medicine at the Georgetown University Lombardi Cancer Center, is completing an M.P.H. at the Johns Hopkins University. His research focuses on mechanisms of radiation-induced signal transduction and DNA repair, and identifying molecular targets for sensitizing tumors to radiotherapy. Dr. Jorgensen recently received NCI’s Ruth L. Kirschstein Senior Fellow Award for his project on "DNA Repair Gene Polymorphisms and Breast Cancer Risk."
Victor Kryuchov, Ph.D., visited the Chornobyl Research Unit (REB), in November. Dr. Kryuchov, who comes from the Institute of Biophysics in Moscow, Russia, worked with Drs. Andre Bouville and Nickolas Luckyanov on projects related to the dose reconstruction method RADRUE (radiation dose reconstruction with uncertainty estimates) and its use in the study of Chornobyl clean-up workers. Dale Preston, Ph.D., Chief of the Department of Statistics at the Radiation Effects Research Foundation, in Hiroshima, Japan, visited the REB in October to work with Drs. Charles Land, Kiyohiko Mabuchi, and Elaine Ron on studies of cancer among atomic bomb survivors. Lynn Rundhaugen has joined the DCEG OD as a communications fellow. Ms. Rundhaugen holds bachelor’s degrees in biology and economics from St. Olaf College and Northwestern University, respectively. She is an M.P.H. candidate at Northwestern University and, as part of her graduate program, Ms. Rundhaugen studied international health and social policy in Norway, Ireland, and Germany. Before arriving at NIH, Ms. Rundhaugen worked at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, first as a laboratory technician and most recently as a Certified Clinical Research Coordinator, working closely with the leukemia program. During her 6-month fellowship in DCEG, Ms. Rundhaugen will assist with communications projects. Min Shen, M.D., Ph.D., has joined OEEB as a postdoctoral fellow. Dr. Shen received a medical degree and a doctorate in epidemiology from Tongji Medical College in China. Before coming to NCI, he worked at the International Agency for Research on Cancer in studies of gene-environment interactions in the development of bladder cancer. At DCEG, Dr. Shen will collaborate on a study of lung cancer among benzeneexposed workers in China.
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ERRATUMIn the November 2003 issue, we mistakenly identified Bonnie Pedersen, a 2003 summer intern in VEB, as Consol Serra Pujadas, M.D., Ph.D., who was a visiting scientist in the OEEB last summer. |
More than 50 DCEG scientists took part in the 17th NIH research festival, a two-and-a-half-day event in October that highlighted intramural research. The festival, which began in 1986 and has been held annually since 1988, included four poster sessions on more than 20 topics, two minisymposia comprising 12 sessions, and a special job fair for postdoctoral and clinical fellows. This year, the festival was launched by major scientific symposia that celebrated the NIH Clinical Center’s 50th anniversary. Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr.,M.D., DCEG Director, was the 2003 festival cochair, along with Dr. Robert Desimone, Scientific Director of the National Institute of Mental Health. New additions to the research festival included a special poster section that focused on epidemiology. This subject area proved very successful; 72 posters were presented during the epidemiology section alone, making it the festival’s largest poster session.More than 80 percent of the epidemiology posters described DCEG research projects. "The poster session indicated the enormous breadth of cutting-edge biomedical research taking place at NIH," Dr. Fraumeni said. "This provided a unique forum for NIH investigators to communicate with one another and to identify opportunities for collaborative interdisciplinary research." The festival also featured a molecular epidemiology minisymposium cochaired by Nathaniel Rothman, M.D., M.P.H., M.H.S., from the Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, and Stephen Chanock, M.D., Director of the NCI Core Genotyping Facility. The session, titled "Using New 'Omics' in the Molecular Epidemiology of Chronic Diseases: Emergence of a New Paradigm," explored the clinical applications of proteomics, the use of gene expression profiling to identify cancer targets for diagnosis and treatment, the application of genetic variation in the study of cancer etiology, and the challenge of false-positive findings with these new genetic technologies. Sholom Wacholder, Ph.D., of the Biostatistics Branch, gave the last presentation. |
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