Increasing Appropriate Screening For Colorectal Cancer Patients And First Degree Relatives. A RCT.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,372,866.00
Summary
Adoption of guideline recommendations is difficult to achieve. This research aims to improve adherence to guideline recommendations for surveillance for people with colorectal cancer and screening in their first degree relatives using an educational intervention. People with colorectal cancer and their first degree relatives will be randomly assigned to an educational intervention or to usual care, and adherence to guideline recommendations will be compared between groups.
Investigating Tumour Maintenance Using Regulated RNA Interference
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$511,294.00
Summary
Inhibiting gene expression using the recently discovered process known as RNA interference (RNAi) can be used as an experimental tool to analyse specific genes, in cells and genetically engineered animal models of human disease. I propose to validate potential drug targets in cancer by using RNAi to inhibit specific genes in established mouse tumours. A further aim is to use RNAi to mimic human cancer gene mutations in mouse cancer models, to discover novel tumour suppressor genes.
A Randomised Phase III Trial Of Anastrozole For Breast Cancer Prevention In Postmenopausal Women At High Risk.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,593,125.00
Summary
Each year over 10,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in Australia and over 2500 women die. This project (IBIS 2) is designed to continue the work started by the IBIS 1 prevention trial in determining whether a chemopreventive strategy towards breast cancer is beneficial. IBIS 1 investigated the use of tamoxifen as a preventative agent for women with moderate to increased risk of developing breast cancer and was found to prevent 48% of oestrogen receptor positive breast cancers. IBIS 2 ....Each year over 10,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in Australia and over 2500 women die. This project (IBIS 2) is designed to continue the work started by the IBIS 1 prevention trial in determining whether a chemopreventive strategy towards breast cancer is beneficial. IBIS 1 investigated the use of tamoxifen as a preventative agent for women with moderate to increased risk of developing breast cancer and was found to prevent 48% of oestrogen receptor positive breast cancers. IBIS 2 investigates anastrozole (Arimidex) as a preventative agent for women with moderate to increased risk of developing breast cancer. It is a multi-centre, randomised, double blind control trial which has the potential to benefit many millions of women worldwide. Anastrozole is an aromatase inhibitor (AI). AIs are a class of endocrine drug which have been shown to be at least as effective as tamoxifen but without the serious side effects seen with tamoxifen. Anastrozole has been shown to be 60% better than tamoxifen in preventing a second breast cancer in women already diagnosed with breast cancer. Women who participate in this study will be postmenopausal with a relative risk of at least two-fold of developing breast cancer. They will be randomised to receive either anastrozole or placebo as a daily tablet, and neither the woman nor her treating clinician will know which treatment has been allocated (double blind study). To investigate whether anastrozole effects bone density, a baseline bone density scan will be measured prior to study entry. This sub-study will investigate bone density in greater detail and the potential role of bone preserving treatment (bisphosphonate). The primary endpoint for the IBIS 2 study is the development of histologically confirmed breast cancer, invasive or non-invasive.Read moreRead less
IBIS II: A Randomised Phase III Trial Of Anastrozole For Breast Cancer Prevention In Postmenopausal Women At High Risk.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,732,559.00
Summary
The IBIS II trial builds on the successful IBIS 1 breast cancer (BC) prevention trial in determining whether a chemopreventive strategy towards BC is beneficial. Women who are postmenopausal with an increased risk of BC are randomised to receive either anastrozole (an aromatase inhibitor) or placebo as a daily tablet. Neither the woman nor her clinician know which treatment has been allocated (double blind study). IBIS 2 has the potential to benefit many higher risk women worldwide.
Prevention Of Late Breast Cancer (BC) Events In Postmenopausal Women With Endocrine Responsive BC.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$4,687,599.00
Summary
This proposal is from Australia's national breast cancer (BC) trials group, the ANZ BCTG, for a new phase III, multi-centre clinical trial evaluating whether much later endocrine therapy with an aromatase inhibitor can prevent BC recurrence in postmenopausal women who have: had hormone sensitive BC at least 6 years ago; were treated by Tamoxifen more than 1 year ago; and, are currently disease free. Subjects will randomly receive letrozole or placebo as a daily tablet for five years.
The Role And Inheritance Of Constitutional Epimutations In Early-onset Colorectal Cancer.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$347,551.00
Summary
Traditionally familial cancers are thought to be caused by spelling mistakes within the genetic code of cancer prevention genes. Our group has found that chemical attachments to one gene (MLH1) stops it working, even where there is no spelling mistake, and that those chemical changes can be inherited in families with bowel cancer. We will determine how frequently this type of defect occurs in bowel cancer patients, how and why it arises, and if other cancer genes are similarly affected.