PROJECT SUMMARY
Breast cancer (BC) is not only a heterogenous disease by itself but it also has a differential racial impact.
Prognostically, it has an inferior outcome in women of African American (AA) descent as compared to European
American. BC in women of African ancestry presents at a younger age and is associated with more advanced
disease and higher mortality rates as compared to breast cancer in age-matched patients of EA or Asian ancestry
(AsA). Several factors, including ethnicity and social determinants of health factors (SDOH), including obesity
adds to the complexity to nature of the disease. The chronicity of these environmental stressors has played a
determinate role in racial/ethnic BC inequities. We propose to investigate the intersection of SDOH and biological
determinants of tumor biology by examining the convergence of obesity- and ancestry-related inflammatory
factors and their consequences on tumor genomic and immunological landscapes. In this project, the association
of the obesity-associated inflammatory signature for those with African ancestry in admixed-African BC patients
in Black Belt Alabama will be explored. We will determine genetic ancestry-associated differences in tumor
immune microenvironments linked to systemic inflammation and obesity. To do so, we have adopted the
Tuskegee Total Cancer Care protocol, which partners with local health care providers and patients with the goals
of using longitudinally collected data and biospecimens to develop an evidence-based approach that meets the
needs of minority patients. We will work through three distinct specific aims, utilizing case-control studies, which
will flow hierarchically from broad patient-centered population-level factors to systemic-and genomic-level factors
to characteristics tumors and heterogeneous cell types within the tumor. These will help define distinct risk factors
that capture both the social and biological mechanisms that underlie tumor phenotypes. Integration of these data
will provide new opportunities to develop interventions that, on a community level, will help to overcome immune
and inflammation-driven/obesity-related BC progression
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
CFDA Code
DUNS Number
128214178
UEI
U9JCYEXFEEU4
Project Start Date
07-July-1997
Project End Date
31-March-2028
Budget Start Date
01-April-2024
Budget End Date
31-March-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$365,447
Direct Costs
$249,675
Indirect Costs
$117,292
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
$365,447
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5U54MD007585-33 6507
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