This is a competing renewal of a UM1 application to support the infrastructure of the original Nurses? Health Study (NHS), begun in 1976. The accumulated resources of NHS provide exceptional opportunities for identifying new paradigms in cancer prevention, etiology and survival. The resources encompass: lifestyle, diet and health data from 20 biennial questionnaires spanning 4 decades from 121,700 women; linked residential data on environment and neighborhood; blood samples from 32,826 participants in mid-life; a 2nd blood and morning urine in 18,743 of these women 10 years later; buccal cells from 33,040 women without blood; 62,641 toenail samples; 6,027 pre-diagnostic mammograms; tissue blocks from >14,000 patients across 16 cancers. The scientific contributions of NHS have been equally exceptional. During this funding period, accomplishments include: >400 cancer-related publications; nearly 300 resource-sharing projects by external investigators and pooling projects/consortia (a 130% increase since 2014); and participation in 33 cancer consortia, including 22 NCI consortia. Most importantly, NHS research has meaningfully guided national and international cancer guidelines on issues ranging from diet to adjuvant treatment. Our overarching goals here are to (1) efficiently expand resources with collection of key new data elements and specimens, and (2) maximize the application and sharing of existing resources, facilitating their transformation into novel cancer discoveries. First, NHS women are now >70 years of age. Over 1/3 of cancers in the US occur after age 75, and half of cancer survivors are 70+ years. Many cancer phenotype distributions appear to change with age (e.g., serous ovarian cancer becomes more common). Moreover, in the next 15 years, the proportion of the US population >70 years will grow by 60%. Thus, continued data and tumor tissue collection in NHS is critical to inform new behavioral and biological research on cancer etiology, survival and quality of life in aging. Specifically, in the next funding period, we will continue to: collect questionnaire data on behavior, quality of life, and health in aging; document cancers/ deaths; link with cancer and death registries, and Medicare claims to enhance follow-up; maintain our bio- repository; collect new tissue blocks. Second, we have had great accomplishments in data use/sharing, but this could be further increased to harness the brain-power of more cancer scientists. Mastering the large, complex data systems with decades of accumulated data elements is a challenge that inhibits efficiency of data sharing. In the next funding period, we propose to update and modernize our data systems, to grow support a large community of users via user-friendly tools for data management, visualization, and analysis. This will be done in an exciting collaboration with The Broad Institute, which is leading and developing similar platforms for The Cancer Genome Atlas, the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project, and others.

Public Health Relevance

We propose to continue the follow-up of the Nurses' Health Study (NHS), a Cancer Epidemiology Cohort of 121,700 women enrolled in 1976 at ages 30 to 55 years. Data include repeated measures of diet, physical activity, and other exposures over 42 years of follow-up, as well as blood, urine, buccal cells, and tumor tissue biospecimens. Cohort follow-up is reaching the most informative phase for older ages, and is a unique resource for scientific aims that integrate exposures over the life course, including diet, other lifestyle variables, biomarkers, genetic predisposition and mediating variables, in relation to cancer risk and survival. A major aim is to foster greater widespread utilization of this resource.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project with Complex Structure Cooperative Agreement (UM1)
Project #
5UM1CA186107-07
Application #
9904386
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1)
Program Officer
Ellison, Gary L
Project Start
2014-07-22
Project End
2024-06-30
Budget Start
2020-07-01
Budget End
2021-06-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
030811269
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02115
Wang, Tiange; Heianza, Yoriko; Sun, Dianjianyi et al. (2018) Improving adherence to healthy dietary patterns, genetic risk, and long term weight gain: gene-diet interaction analysis in two prospective cohort studies. BMJ 360:j5644
Gupta, Shruti; Curhan, Sharon G; Curhan, Gary C (2018) Biomarkers of Systemic Inflammation and Risk of Incident Hearing Loss. Ear Hear :
Kim, Iris Y; O'Reilly, Éilis J; Hughes, Katherine C et al. (2018) Interaction between caffeine and polymorphisms of glutamate ionotropic receptor NMDA type subunit 2A (GRIN2A) and cytochrome P450 1A2 (CYP1A2) on Parkinson's disease risk. Mov Disord 33:414-420
Song, Mingyang; Wu, Kana; Meyerhardt, Jeffrey A et al. (2018) Fiber Intake and Survival After Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis. JAMA Oncol 4:71-79
Bertrand, Kimberly A; Eliassen, A Heather; Hankinson, Susan E et al. (2018) Circulating Hormones and Mammographic Density in Premenopausal Women. Horm Cancer 9:117-127
Merritt, Melissa A; Rice, Megan S; Barnard, Mollie E et al. (2018) Pre-diagnosis and post-diagnosis use of common analgesics and ovarian cancer prognosis (NHS/NHSII): a cohort study. Lancet Oncol 19:1107-1116
Li, Bo; Wang, Yanru; Xu, Yinghui et al. (2018) Genetic variants in RORA and DNMT1 associated with cutaneous melanoma survival. Int J Cancer 142:2303-2312
Jung, Seungyoun; Allen, Naomi; Arslan, Alan A et al. (2018) Anti-Müllerian hormone and risk of ovarian cancer in nine cohorts. Int J Cancer 142:262-270
Hamada, Tsuyoshi; Zhang, Xuehong; Mima, Kosuke et al. (2018) Fusobacterium nucleatum in Colorectal Cancer Relates to Immune Response Differentially by Tumor Microsatellite Instability Status. Cancer Immunol Res 6:1327-1336
Sparks, Jeffrey A; Lin, Tzu-Chieh; Camargo Jr, Carlos A et al. (2018) Rheumatoid arthritis and risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or asthma among women: A marginal structural model analysis in the Nurses' Health Study. Semin Arthritis Rheum 47:639-648

Showing the most recent 10 out of 489 publications