Springboard for more disparities research
The biological data will be used for two new research projects and any others that might arise from this NCI grant, known as a “mini-SPORE,” or Specialized Program of Research Excellence. The grant was awarded to the Hutch in preparation for a larger, more comprehensive SPORE focusing on cancer disparities.
SPOREs are large study grants on steroids — hefty projects that pull in multiple institutions and investigators and allow for more innovation and a faster translation of interventions into clinical use.
“SPOREs allow us to bring in a broader research community to tackle questions more holistically,” said Peters, who holds the Fred Hutch 40th Anniversary Endowed Chair. “That’s the major advantage. You can have a diversity of expertise and backgrounds to really drill down into the problem. There’s a lot of synergy. You can start thinking much more outside the box.”
The new “mini-SPORE” grant covers the creation of an administration core, a biospecimen and pathology core, and a developmental research program to identify research questions to be proposed as full projects in their future SPORE application.
“By collecting this material and creating a biospecimen bank, we’re creating an opportunity for others to do research on racially and ethnically diverse populations,” said Harrison. “The sequenced tumor tissue microarrays will be made available for others to use.”
Multiple populations, multiple perspectives
Li, an epidemiologist who also serves as faculty director of the Hutch Office of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, said the new grant will provide a slew of opportunities.
“This grant will enable us to study these populations in an unprecedented way,” he said. “We’ve also been trying to increase our capacity to do research into health disparities and this grant is an ideal mechanism to do that.”
Li said institutional and structural racism is an “important piece” of the disparities puzzle but agreed the high rate of early onset disease and/or high incidence and mortality in these groups suggests further multidisciplinary research is needed.
“This unique collaboration will bring together lab scientists, public health scientists and clinicians,” he said. “We will do work that spans the entire continuum. We’ll assess social determinants of health, molecular characteristics of tumors and the microbiome, so we can understand the disparities that are present from multiple perspectives.”
Toward that end, the grant also provides for not just a diverse mix of patients, but a diverse mix of investigators.
“A key component of the grant is to help promote the careers of early investigators, particularly underrepresented minority scientists,” he said.
A pair of studies will kick off the new grant.
The first will look for novel tumor-tissue based predictors of colorectal cancer progression and death in African Americans, Alaska Natives, Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites and assess these predictors’ potential for clinical utility, that is, to guide new strategies or therapies.
Led by Li and geneticist and physician Grady, the study will also evaluate the immune response to colorectal cancers in the different groups, comparing tumor tissue and outcomes data from Black, Hispanic/Latino and Alaska Native patients with that of non-Hispanic whites.
“We know that a strong immune response in a tumor can be very beneficial for improved survival,” said Peters. “But we really don’t know right now if our immune response differs between different ethnic groups.”