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Prostate Cancer

$85,511P30FY2025CANIH

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, Seattle WA

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT06995898Trial NCT06682039Trial NCT06484595Trial NCT06193070Trial NCT05947500Trial NCT05930496Trial NCT05183828Trial NCT04902144Trial NCT04751383Trial NCT04682301Trial NCT04667481Trial NCT04660331Trial NCT04539366Trial NCT04505553Trial NCT04502524Trial NCT04500548Trial NCT04496219Trial NCT04489719Trial NCT04472338Trial NCT04466475Trial NCT04447313Trial NCT04444232Trial NCT04442581Trial NCT04431479Trial NCT04410900Trial NCT04387227Trial NCT04384692Trial NCT04383743Trial NCT04375631Trial NCT04372927Trial NCT04370301Trial NCT04359784Trial NCT04336943Trial NCT04329065Trial NCT04282187Trial NCT04260776Trial NCT04257578Trial NCT04254133Trial NCT04231877Trial NCT04220229Trial NCT04211766Trial NCT04208724Trial NCT04205409Trial NCT04200482Trial NCT04198922Trial NCT04196010Trial NCT04195945Trial NCT04195633Trial NCT04194918Trial NCT04188912Trial NCT04175431Trial NCT04156828Trial NCT04155840Trial NCT04151940Trial NCT04120246Trial NCT04111497Trial NCT04083183Trial NCT04083170Trial NCT04081779Trial NCT04081298Trial NCT04062955Trial NCT04060849Trial NCT03999515Trial NCT03991884Trial NCT03986502Trial NCT03980769Trial NCT03970096Trial NCT03907527Trial NCT03891784Trial NCT03864419Trial NCT03807063Trial NCT03806192Trial NCT03781778Trial NCT03779867Trial NCT03779854Trial NCT03778021Trial NCT03776864Trial NCT03749460Trial NCT03747484Trial NCT03737955Trial NCT03723863Trial NCT03718338Trial NCT03672981Trial NCT03670966Trial NCT03670069Trial NCT03660930Trial NCT03649841Trial NCT03641287Trial NCT03606486Trial NCT03602898Trial NCT03600038Trial NCT03585231Trial NCT03574012Trial NCT03570476Trial NCT03531918Trial NCT03525106Trial NCT03523195Trial NCT03522584Trial NCT03518242Trial NCT03516812

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Cancer of the prostate is an extraordinarily common malignancy that exhibits substantial heterogeneity in its clinical behavior, ranging from indolent, slow-growing tumors to aggressive tumors that rapidly progress toward cancer-specific lethality. The Prostate Cancer (PC) Program promotes a multi-disciplinary research environment designed to integrate basic sciences, population sciences, and clinical medicine to produce novel prevention and therapeutic strategies that will positively impact human health. The program aims to advance and exploit scientific knowledge that will reduce the morbidity and mortality attributed to prostate cancer and lead to improvements in patients’ quality of life. The PC Program has three primary areas of focus where cooperative efforts (allocation of resources; faculty recruitments; scientific collaborations) are coordinated to make substantive advancements: 1) To develop approaches for determining early stage prostate cancer risk, optimize detection strategies, and deploy risk-based interventions; 2) Develop a molecular understanding of the androgen receptor signaling program to inform the rational design of therapeutic strategies for treating high-risk localized and metastatic prostate cancer; 3) Develop therapeutic approaches for the treatment of prostate cancers directed toward inhibiting key oncogenic (intrinsic) drivers, and modulating components of the tumor microenvironment. The P30 CCSG supports this research program by providing: key shared resources, particularly Comparative Medicine, Specimen Processing, Genomics, and Research Pathology; administrative and logistical support for meetings, pilot funding for new clinical and translational research projects, and recruitment resources for new faculty. The program currently has 43 members based at the University of Washington (UW) and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center (FH), all of whom practice clinically at the UW, FH, and Veterans Administration Puget Sound Health Care System. Ten members have primary appointments at FH, with 33 members at UW with faculty appointments spanning 11 departments or divisions. Seven members joined this program since the last cycle. Thirty-four members (77%) have peer-reviewed funding, are the principal investigator of a clinical trial or are newly recruited and supported by the institution. The current research support of Program members comprises $11.4M in peer-reviewed funding of which $6.5M (57%) is from the NCI. Due to the efforts in promoting interdisciplinary studies, a substantial component of the research funding is in the form of P50, P01, and other collaborative grants. Program members published 833 papers in the current cycle, of which 27% were intraprogrammatic and 23% were interprogrammatic.

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