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5R01CA046475-17 (R01)
Title Benign Breast Disease and Risk of Breast Cancer
Institution BRIGHAM AND WOMEN'S HOSPITAL, BOSTON, MA
Principal Investigator RULLA TAMIMI NCI Program Director Leah Sansbury
Cancer Activity Epidemiology Division DCCPS
Funded Amount $340,162 Project Dates 09/30/1987 - 11/30/2009
Fiscal Year 2008 Project Type Grant
Research Topics (SICs) w/ Percent Relevance Cancer Types (Disease Sites) w/ Percent Relevance
Aging (100.0%)
Biochemical Epidemiology (100.0%)
Breast Cancer - Epidemiology (100.0%)
Clinical Research (100.0%)
Contraception and Reproduction Research (5.0%)
Injury (total) Accidents/Adverse Effects (50.0%)
Breast Cancer (100.0%)
Common Scientific Outline
Endogenous Factors in the Origin and Cause of Cancer
Exogenous Factors in the Origin and Cause of Cancer
Abstract DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): To understand the multi-factorial nature of breast carcinogenesis, we must determine what factors play a role at each stage. By studying benign breast disease we can examine an earlier period in the disease process. This proposal aims to examine a full spectrum of stages on the pathway to breast cancer in Nurses' Health Study I and II: 1) early stages by focusing on the relationship between adolescent diet and incidence of proliferative breast disease; 2) intermediate and cumulative lifetime exposures by concentrating on genetic and molecular predictors of proliferative breast disease; and 3) later stages by examining protein expression in benign breast tissue and subsequent breast cancer risk. Specifically, we hypothesize that adolescent intake of total and specific subtypes of fat are associated with proliferative breast disease; polymorphisms and haplotypes in the insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I pathway and the progesterone receptor, as well as circulating levels of IGF-1 and IGFBP-3, are related to incidence of proliferative benign breast disease; expression of molecular markers (ER-a, PR, IGF-1 R, Ki67 and cytokeratin 5/6) in benign breast disease tissue is associated with subsequent risk of breast cancer. This study offers a unique opportunity to prospectively examine adolescent diet and molecular markers in relation to proliferative breast disease. Additional follow-up of the breast cancer nested case-control data set will allow us to examine in more detail the relationship between proliferative breast disease and subsequent breast cancer. The creation of tissue microarrays using benign breast tissue will lay the foundation for this and future studies to efficiently examine the role of molecular markers in the development of breast cancer.
Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health USA.gov