
Peters garners $11.2 million for colorectal research
National Institutes of Health grant to delve into colon cancer susceptibility; follows Peters’ $4.6 million stimulus grant
October 12, 2009
By Colleen Steelquist
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Center News file photo
Dr. Riki Peters
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Dr. Ulrike “Riki” Peters, a cancer prevention researcher in
the Public Health Sciences Division, has received a four-year, $11.2
million grant from the National Institutes of Health to identify genetic
variants associated with colorectal cancer, the second leading cause of cancer
death in the United States.
The NIH funding for this project establishes the Colorectal Cancer Genome-Wide Association Studies
Consortium. This international effort will investigate whether common
variations in genes influence colorectal cancer risk. Researchers in Germany,
Canada, France and eight U.S. institutions are part of the consortium.
“The consortium provides an unprecedented opportunity to
investigate the underlying genetic susceptibility to colorectal cancer, which
is, at this point, largely unexplained,” Peters said.
Scanning for genetic variantsGenome-wide association studies involve a scan of common genetic markers across the genome in large numbers of individuals to find genetic variations associated with a
particular disease. Once new genetic targets are identified, researchers can use
the information to develop better strategies to detect, treat and prevent the
disease, said PHS' Dr. Li Hsu, lead biostatistician.
Early genome-wide scans have demonstrated considerable
success in identifying genetic variants associated with common diseases. The
consortium will conduct a pooled analysis of existing colorectal cancer
genome-wide scans—which included more than 15,000 individuals—and validate
their findings in a large-scale independent replication study of similar size.
$4.6 million stimulus grant for related projectThrough the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of
2009, Peters also received $4.6 million for a related project. The one-year
stimulus funding allows Peters and her team to conduct additional genome-wide scans using data from the Women’s
Health Initiative, the Nurses’ Health Study, the Health Professional Follow-Up
Study, and the Physicians’ Health Study. They will include these results in the
larger consortium analysis.
"As this multisite project will be conducted in well
characterized cohorts, we will also be able to examine whether environmental
factors such as smoking, medications, alcohol, physical activity or diet change
the risk of colorectal cancer related to these genetic variants," said Dr.
Carolyn Hutter, a PHS postdoctoral fellow working on the project.
Peters’ funding success comes on the heels of the July
announcement of her
Presidential
Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the nation’s
highest honor for scientists at the beginning of their independent research
careers.
Ulrike Peters garners $11.2 million for colon research
October 12, 2009
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