This is a resubmission of a competing renewal application requesting support for a Program Project currently in its 27th year of continuous funding. At the recommendation of the Program's External Advisory committee, the theme of this renewal application was narrowed from the previous broad theme of """"""""latrogenic Causes of Cancer"""""""" to a more narrow theme of """"""""Unresolved Public Health Issues Related to HT and Cancer."""""""" The Program has a rich history of research on exogenous hormones including hormone therapy (HT). Data generated from the Program have had major influences on pharmaceutical formulations, prescribing practices, and chemoprevention strategies regarding exogenous hormone especially HT use. The scientific program of the current application consists of four projects focused around this theme supported by four core resources. The projects include: (1) a study of HT and ovarian cancer emphasizing possible risk differences in formulations and histologic subtypes; (2) a study of HT and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL), again with an emphasis on possible risk differences by histologic subtypes; (3) a study to determine which women who use HT develop adverse changes in mammographic densities and whether these are the women, in turn, who will develop breast cancer; and (4) a statistical study of the impact of different sources of measurement error in studies of HT and cancer. As a major emphasis of the Program will be to evaluate the potential risk modifying effects of a series of genes contributing to absorption, transport and metabolism of HT, this latter project also deals with statistical issues related to identification and analysis of reconstructed haplotypes. Core resources include a Scientific Leadership and Administrative Core (Core A) for overseeing scientific direction and conducting the administrative activities required by this Program; the Cancer Surveillance Core (Core B), which provides case identification, including especially rapid case ascertainment for the projects; a Genotyping Core (Core C), for genotyping a large series of candidate genes involved in HT absorption, transport and metabolism and selected additional genes; and a Control Identification Core (Core D), which provides neighborhood control identification for two of the proposed projects.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01CA017054-28
Application #
7310810
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2006-08-01
Budget End
2007-07-31
Support Year
28
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$58,648
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Type
DUNS #
072933393
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90089
Harris, Holly R; Babic, Ana; Webb, Penelope M et al. (2018) Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, Oligomenorrhea, and Risk of Ovarian Cancer Histotypes: Evidence from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 27:174-182
Lu, Yingchang; Beeghly-Fadiel, Alicia; Wu, Lang et al. (2018) A Transcriptome-Wide Association Study Among 97,898 Women to Identify Candidate Susceptibility Genes for Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Risk. Cancer Res 78:5419-5430
Peres, Lauren C; Risch, Harvey; Terry, Kathryn L et al. (2018) Racial/ethnic differences in the epidemiology of ovarian cancer: a pooled analysis of 12 case-control studies. Int J Epidemiol 47:460-472
Lee, Eunjung; Luo, Jianning; Schumacher, Fredrick R et al. (2018) Growth factor genes and change in mammographic density after stopping combined hormone therapy in the California Teachers Study. BMC Cancer 18:1072
Ma, Huiyan; Ursin, Giske; Xu, Xinxin et al. (2018) Body mass index at age 18 years and recent body mass index in relation to risk of breast cancer overall and ER/PR/HER2-defined subtypes in white women and African-American women: a pooled analysis. Breast Cancer Res 20:5
Liu, Gang; Mukherjee, Bhramar; Lee, Seunggeun et al. (2018) Robust Tests for Additive Gene-Environment Interaction in Case-Control Studies Using Gene-Environment Independence. Am J Epidemiol 187:366-377
Ong, Jue-Sheng; Hwang, Liang-Dar; Cuellar-Partida, Gabriel et al. (2018) Assessment of moderate coffee consumption and risk of epithelial ovarian cancer: a Mendelian randomization study. Int J Epidemiol 47:450-459
Zhong, Charlie; Cockburn, Myles; Cozen, Wendy et al. (2017) Evaluating the use of friend or family controls in epidemiologic case-control studies. Cancer Epidemiol 46:9-13
Praestegaard, Camilla; Jensen, Allan; Jensen, Signe M et al. (2017) Cigarette smoking is associated with adverse survival among women with ovarian cancer: Results from a pooled analysis of 19 studies. Int J Cancer 140:2422-2435
Reid, Brett M; Permuth, Jennifer B; Chen, Y Ann et al. (2017) Integration of Population-Level Genotype Data with Functional Annotation Reveals Over-Representation of Long Noncoding RNAs at Ovarian Cancer Susceptibility Loci. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 26:116-125

Showing the most recent 10 out of 324 publications