Our researchers are investigating ways to prevent prostate cancer, including identifying lifestyle choices that can lower risk. They also seek ways to determine which patients would most benefit from treatment and how to improve responses to treatment. And they are learning how to better tailor treatment to each patient’s individual tumor and discovering new therapeutic targets.
Our Prostate Cancer Researchers
Our interdisciplinary scientists and clinicians work together to prevent, diagnose and treat prostate cancer as well as other cancers and diseases.
Patient Treatment and Care
At Fred Hutch, our interdisciplinary teams work together to prevent, diagnose and treat cancer, HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Our aim is to provide patients access to advanced treatment options while getting the best cancer care.
Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials
Clinical research is an essential part of the scientific process that leads to new treatments and better care. Clinical trials can also be a way for patients to get early access to cutting-edge new therapies. Our clinical research teams are running clinical studies on various kinds of prostate cancer.
Basic Biology of Prostate Cancer
The discoveries that push treatment forward often arise from a deeper understanding of the fundamental biology of a disease. Our scientists are working to better understand prostate cancer at that fundamental level, with a particular focus on advanced, late-stage prostate cancer. They are examining how molecular changes in prostate tumors drive their development and progression. This knowledge may shed light on tumor vulnerabilities and future treatment targets.
Our scientists have developed preclinical models to improve our understanding of basic prostate tumor biology and test potential new therapies, including immunotherapies.
Precision Oncology Strategies
Ultimately, our researchers hope to help oncologists tailor treatment to each individual patient and his tumor. Doing so requires a deeper understanding of the molecular and genetic alterations in tumors and how they influence disease development, progression and treatment response. Our scientists seek to discover new tumor vulnerabilities that point the way to more effective, targeted treatments, particularly for men with advanced, aggressive tumors.
Balancing Detection and Treatment
One of the major treatment issues facing the prostate cancer field is that of overdiagnosis. Prostate cancer is very common, and most men with the disease have slow-growing tumors that don’t require treatment. But some tumors are deadly, and patients with those tumors benefit from treatment. Ideally, oncologists would treat only those men for whom the lifesaving benefits of treatment outweigh the risks of side effects. But it’s not always clear which patients fall into which category. Our scientists seek to provide oncologists with better tools to make those distinctions.
Many Fred Hutch investigators study active surveillance, or “watchful waiting,” in which men with prostate tumors are monitored but not treated. From these studies, our scientists seek to gain information on how to determine which patients will benefit from this approach and which should be treated sooner and more aggressively.
Our scientists are also improving the translation of new diagnostics and therapeutics from the laboratory into the clinic to improve patients’ quality of life.
Risk Factors
Many factors can raise or lower a man’s risk of developing prostate cancer and perhaps even the risk of recurrence after treatment. These include diet, exercise and inherited gene variants. Our researchers are working to identify such factors and measure their impact on risk and patient outcomes. This information can help improve screening and treatment recommendations for men who are at risk or have been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
Seattle Obesity Project
Public Health Sciences, Cancer PreventionBased on the evidence collected through the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT), researchers are evaluating the role of vitamin D in key carcinogenesis-related processes, including gene transcription, cellular differentiation, T-cell mediated immunity, cell cycle control, proliferation and apoptosis.
Funding Agency: National Institutes of Health
Vitamin D and Prostate Cancer: Biomarkers and Genetic Variation Study
Public Health Sciences, Cancer PreventionThis study's objective is to investigate the mechanisms by which Vitamin D influences prostate cancer risk among 18,000 participants in the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial. Strong evidence indicates that vitamin D is involved in key carcinogenesis-related processes, including gene transcription, cellular differentiation, T-cell mediated immunity, cell cycle control, proliferation and apoptosis.
Funding Agency: National Cancer Institute
Contact: Diana Lowry, dlowry@fredhutch.org
Vitamins and Lifestyle (VITAL) Study
- Emily White, Ph.D.
The VITAL study investigates the associations of supplement use with cancer risk. Investigators are specifically concerned with how vitamin C, E, calcium, multivitamins, folate, omega-3 fatty acids, and fiber related to prostate, breast, lung, colorectal, melanoma, bladder, blood/lymph cancers, as well as total cancer incidence and total mortality.
Funding Agency: National Institutes of Health
Contact: Emily White, ewhite@fredhutch.org