DiagnosticsRoswell Park Awarded $2.8 Million Grant To Study Ovarian Cancer
The National Cancer Institute has awarded a five-year, $2.8 million Research Project (RO1) grant to Roswell Park Cancer Institute http://www.roswellpark.org/ (RPCI) researchers to investigate the role of immunological pathways in the development of ovarian cancer.
Roswell Park investigators are Kirsten Moysich, PhD , Division of Cancer Prevention and Population Sciences; Kunle Odunsi, MD, PhD , Department of Gynecologic Oncology; and Lara Sucheston, PhD, Assistant Professor of Biostatistics, University at Buffalo.
"The coveted RO1 grants support individual scientists whose grant applications, after stringent peer review, have demonstrated outstanding science," said Candace Johnson, PhD, Deputy Director and the Wallace Family Chair in Translational Research, RPCI. "Roswell Park donations were critical in helping us initiate this research to generate novel preliminary data needed for our successful submission."
While the causes of ovarian cancer remain largely unknown, scientific studies have consistently linked high regulatory T-cell levels to cancer. Unlike so-called effector T cells that attack foreign substances in the body, regulatory T cells actually suppress an immune reaction. Roswell Park scientists will, for the first time, conduct a comprehensive investigation of the role of regulatory T cells in ovarian cancer development and prognosis.
Using a population-based case control study, Roswell Park scientists will compare regulatory T-cell levels in women diagnosed with ovarian cancer with those of healthy women. The research will help determine if women with ovarian cancer have higher blood regulatory T-cell levels than healthy women and if ovarian cancer patients with genetically determined high regulatory T-cell profiles have poorer clinical outcomes.
"These data will be useful in the development of novel treatment options for ovarian cancer. Manipulation of regulatory T cells may afford a novel method to stimulate an immune response to this deadly disease. Additionally, physicians may find information concerning regulatory T-cell levels a useful tool as they evaluate the best treatments for their patients," said Dr. Moysich.
Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of death from gynecological malignancies and the second most common gynecological cancer in the US. In 2009, an estimated 21,550 women will be diagnosed and 14,600 women will die from ovarian cancer.
Roswell Park Cancer Institute