Yale Bulletin and Calendar

November 17, 2006|Volume 35, Number 11|Two-Week Issue


BULLETIN HOME

VISITING ON CAMPUS

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

BULLETIN BOARD

CLASSIFIED ADS


SEARCH ARCHIVES

DEADLINES

DOWNLOAD FORMS

BULLETIN STAFF


PUBLIC AFFAIRS HOME

NEWS RELEASES

E-MAIL US


YALE HOME PAGE


Grant supports research on risk
factors for testicular cancer

Pinpointing reasons behind the dramatic increase in testicular cancer, now the most common malignant cancer among 15- to-35-year-old Caucasian men, is the focus of a five-year, $5.5 million National Cancer Institute (NCI) grant to Yale public health researcher Tongzhang Zheng.

"Testicular cancer is increasing for unknown reasons, and this study will provide important information on possible environmental, genetic and other risk factors," says Zheng, professor and head of the Division of Environmental Health Sciences in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the School of Medicine.

Zheng will collaborate with researchers at Harvard School of Public Health and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center to conduct a population-based, case-control study on men in Connecticut and Massachusetts. The researchers will determine whether exposure to environmental factors such as environmental hormone disruptors increases the risk of testicular cancer. They will measure the levels of these environmental compounds in 800 patients with testicular cancer and in an equal number of unaffected control subjects.

Because so little is known about the potential environmental causes of testicular cancer, Zheng says, the team will collect and evaluate information on various major suspected risk factors, such as past medical history, history of hernia, venereal diseases, and any medication with androgens and other hormones. They will also examine lifetime occupational history, tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption and dietary information.

"Recent studies show that environmental exposures may affect development of testicular cancer," says Zheng. "Determining risk factors that lead to testicular cancer, however, is complicated because genetic susceptibility may modify a person's risk from environmental exposures. We will try to assess the potential gene environment interaction on the manifestations of the disease."

Other researchers on the grant include Theodore R. Holford and Yawei Zhang from the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale; Russ Hauser, Robert Young and Pablo Gomery from Harvard University; and Stephen M. Schwartz and Chu Chen from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Yale launches podcast library on iTunes

Japan gives top civilian honor to Yale scholar

Lin: Great care needed in studying 'finicky' stem cells

Yale SOM renames center in honor of Ira Millstein . . .

Grant supports research on risk factors for testicular cancer

Researchers to study age-related decline of sense of smell

University begins mandatory training for faculty involved with grants

Coat color may not be indicator of species in lemurs, say researchers

Scientists trace evolution of one of the earliest multi-cellular life forms

Study shows seat of emotions in the brain may also contribute . . .

Troupe hopes to dispel stereotypes about ancient dance

Nobel laureate to give public lecture on campus

Colleagues to pay tribute to Bresnick in Carnegie Hall

T.P. Ma honored for pioneering work with semiconductors

Symposium will examine filmmaker's 'European period'

Panel will discuss reconciliation between Israelis, Palestinians

It is the jurists who will be judged at student mock trial tournament

Renowned painting to remain on view at British Art Center

Gala to raise funds for research, treatment of reproductive cancers

Campus Notes


Bulletin Home|Visiting on Campus|Calendar of Events|In the News

Bulletin Board|Classified Ads|Search Archives|Deadlines

Bulletin Staff|Public Affairs|News Releases| E-Mail Us|Yale Home