Former UNMC Researcher to Deliver Prestigious Lecture at Annual Meeting of AACR in New Orleans

A former University of Nebraska Medical Center researcher, Diane Birt,

Ph.D., will make a lecture  presentation at 9 a.m., March 28 at the

92nd annual meeting of the American Association of Cancer Research in New

Orleans. The AACR is made up of more than 17,000 laboratory and clinical

cancer researchers in the United States, Canada and more than 60 foreign

countries.

Dr. Birt’s lecture B the sixth AACR-DeWitt S. Goodman Lecture — is

titled, “Molecular and Hormonal Mechanisms for Dietary Energy Restriction

Prevention of Skin Cancer.” The AACR meeting will be held March 24 to 28.

To be selected to deliver this lecture is considered a great honor for

Dr. Birt, who was a faculty member at the Eppley Institute for Research

in Cancer and Allied Diseases at UNMC from 1976 to 1997. She started as

an assistant professor and eventually gained full professor status. Prior

to joining the Eppley Institute her research focused on diet and aging,

but at Eppley, her research looked at the effects of diet on cancer.

The cross-collaboration between researchers at the Eppley Institute

made her transition to cancer research easy, Dr. Birt said, and she credits

the Eppley Institute with getting her started with the research that helped

her earn this prestigious recognition from AACR.

“The research I did during my 21 years at the Eppley Institute provided

the basis for this recognition,” Dr. Birt said. “I would have never gotten

into cancer research had I not been recruited by the Eppley Institute.”

She is currently professor and chair of the Department of Food Science

and Human Nutrition and director of the Center for Designing Foods to Improve

Nutrition at Iowa State University.

Birt is being recognized for her novel work in the areas of nutrition

and chemoprevention. Using a number of animal cancer models, she has advanced

the understanding of the mechanisms by which diet can influence cancer

development. By providing concrete mechanistic information on the effects

of dietary energy restriction, she contributed significantly to the understanding

of the relationship between diet and reduction of carcinogenesis. It is

believed that ultimately this work could have a major impact on the design

of chemopreventive measures for many human cancers.

The AACR-DeWitt S. Goodman Lectureship acknowledges outstanding work

in the fields of nutrition and cancer and cancer prevention. This area

of study has become very important because of the strong epidemiological

evidence of the role of dietary factors in human cancer risk. The lecture

was established in memory of Dr. DeWitt S. Goodman, an international leader

in the field of nutrition and cancer and cancer prevention.

For more information about the 92nd AACR Annual Meeting, and to view

the preliminary program, please visit the AACR website at www.aacr.org.