UNMC researchers land $5.6 million grant from U.S. Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program

A UNMC cancer researcher, Ercole Cavalieri, D.Sc., is heading a $5.6

million multi-institutional research study to investigate the role estrogen

plays in causing breast cancer and look for new approaches to detecting

and preventing the disease.

The four-year grant is called the Breast Cancer Center of Excellence

Award and comes from the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program.

It is titled, Estrogen-induced Depurination of DNA: A Novel Target for

Breast Cancer Prevention.

Scientists from five other institutions will be involved in the project.

They include the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, the Stehlin Foundation

for Cancer Research in Houston, the University of Virginia Health Sciences

System in Charlottesville, the University of Memphis and the Mayo Clinic

in Rochester, Minn. A total of 28 institutions applied for the grant.

This grant was a perfect fit for our research group. The members belong

to a National Cancer Institute group that was formed in 1997 and meets

twice a year, said Dr. Cavalieri, a professor in the Eppley Research Institute

who is serving as principal investigator on the study. We have a novel

approach to cancer in general. Since we see a common origin of cancer

estrogen, we think that prevention of cancer is a relatively simple problem.

Estrogen can become carcinogenic only when natural mechanisms of protection

do not work properly in our body. In fact, if these protections go away

due to genetic, lifestyle or environmental influences, then cancer can

result. This is what we already know. Now with this grant we want to

take things a step further and try to prevent it from happening.

Dr. Cavalieri said the group believes that a specific oxidated metabolite

called estrogen-3,4-quinone reacts with DNA to produce specific mutations

that trigger cancer. They believe that this same metabolite is responsible

for most common forms of cancer, including breast, ovarian, colon, pancreas

and endometrial cancer, as well as non-Hodgkins lymphoma, leukemia and

melanoma.

At UNMC, Dr. Cavalieri will be working on the study with Eleanor Rogan,

Ph.D., a professor in the Eppley Research Institute and a longtime research

colleague. Together, Drs. Cavalieri and Rogan have six current research

grants totaling more than $10.7 million. The two have each spent nearly

30 years of their careers studying the origin of cancer.

Dr. Cavalieri said the UNMC portion of the study will involve experiments

on rats and animal tissue to try to determine if specific antioxidants

can possibly inhibit the process of cancer initiation. In addition, they

hope to work with cancer patients on a new technique for determining breast

cancer risk.

As the study evolves, the scientists will initiate a large-scale human

breast cancer trial, which will include women taking antioxidants.

This is great recognition for the cutting edge research of Drs. Cavalieri

and Rogan and their contributions to understanding the fundamental causes

of breast cancer. They are truly recognized internationally for their understanding

of this disease, said Ken Cowan, M.D., Ph.D., director of the UNMC Eppley

Cancer Center. This grant will allow them to push forward on their research

at a faster pace to help them determine which women are genetically at

risk for developing breast cancer and  targeting new therapies to

prevent this disease.