Prostate cancer researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center have received a five-year, $6.7 million grant from the National Cancer Institute to support the infrastructure and ongoing growth of the multicenter Canary Prostate Active Surveillance Study, or PASS.
PASS was established in 2008 with funding from the Canary Foundation, a nonprofit that focuses on early detection, particularly in prostate, pancreatic, ovarian, breast and lung cancers.
The PASS cohort, or group of patients under study, provides data and tissue samples from more than 2,100 patients with early-stage prostate cancer. Researchers use the data to better distinguish between low-risk and aggressive prostate cancers, develop biomarkers that can help with early detection, reduce overtreatment and more.
The principal investigator of PASS is Dr. Daniel Lin, director of the Hutch and UW Medicine’s Institute for Prostate Cancer Research. Fred Hutch is the study’s data management and coordinating center.
“PASS was launched with six participating centers in 2008,” said PASS Deputy Director Dr. Lisa Newcomb, a Hutch cancer prevention researcher. “With this grant, we’ll be up to 11 sites. Fred Hutch is the centralized repository — specimens are sent to the Hutch from all the sites — and we have procedures for sharing the data and the specimens among the group [members] and with other researchers.”
The grant is designed to support the infrastructure of the PASS cohort, including the collection of follow-up data, management of the database and management of the biospecimen repository.
“We need to keep those components going so it’s available for research,” Newcomb said.