PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies

New methods funded by NIH grant will have broad use across chronic diseases

UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies
2023-06-16
(Press-News.org)

Breast cancer is a complex disease, and its progression is difficult, yet important, to predict.

While many elements may contribute to a breast cancer prognosis, University of Massachusetts Amherst biostatistician Chi Hyun Lee has zeroed in on one risk factor that has emerged for its potential to predict the disease’s progression.

Lee will use a two-year, $154,791 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in an effort to develop statistical tools that will better predict breast cancer survival rates and survival time after breast cancer recurrence.

While the project focuses on breast cancer research, the proposed statistical methods will have a broad application for other chronic diseases, she notes.

Lee’s research involves an androgen receptor (AR), a biomarker that plays a role at the cellular level in regulating hormones, including in female sexual, somatic and behavioral functions. In excess, however, it has been linked to an increased risk of breast cancer.

“Our goal is that these novel statistical approaches will help us determine the prognostic values of AR and potentially lead to better targeted therapies for patients and advances in breast cancer survival,” Lee says.

For the project, Lee will work with data from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), one of the world’s largest prospective cohort studies investigating the risk factors for major chronic diseases in women, including breast cancer. Data from this study, established in 1976, contains such invaluable information for breast cancer research as lifestyle, hormonal and genetic risk factors, including AR, as well as clinical outcomes such as breast cancer diagnosis, recurrence and death.

“In many epidemiologic studies on breast cancer survival,” Lee explains, “researchers rely on the hazard ratio, or the likelihood of a harmful event such as death or disease progression compared to a control group. This ratio is determined by using a statistical method called the proportional hazard model.

“However, we have found in the NHS data that the assumption of the model on the association between AR expression and breast cancer survival is faulty. This means that the results of the hazard ratio are often misleading when it comes to assessing AR’s prognostic values.”

Lee notes that another statistical method, based on the restricted mean survival time (RMST), has much better prognostic value. RMST is a summary metric defined as the life expectancy up to a specific time point, eliminating assumptions of proportional hazards that may prove to be faulty. The RMST has many advantageous features, such as its straightforward interpretation and robustness.

“Specifically, we can assess the prognostic factor’s effects in terms of absolute effect, which is clinically more interpretable,” Lee says.

Lee’s funding will allow her to develop novel statistical methods based on RMST to fully utilize the rich data from the Nurses’ Health Study.

As a result, she expects to gain a better understanding of the complex effect of AR on breast cancer progression and survival. Ultimately, the funding will support two goals: to develop a flexible regression method based on RMST that will be used to elucidate the clinical significance of AR in survival by different subtypes of breast cancers; and to develop a model-free approach to compare survival rates after breast cancer recurrence between groups with different AR status.

 

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies 2 UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Jefferson Lab outreach efforts earn national recognition

Jefferson Lab outreach efforts earn national recognition
2023-06-16
NEWPORT NEWS, VA – When the global pandemic put the kibosh on in-person events, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility sought alternatives for ensuring its world-class science and unique equipment remained accessible. These efforts culminated in the Fall for Science Virtual Field Trip Event, which rolled out a virtual tour experience, new website, and unique supporting materials. Now, the event has been recognized by the Public Relations Society of America with three Anvil Awards. According ...

Uncovering a cellular process that leads to inflammation

Uncovering a cellular process that leads to inflammation
2023-06-16
Cedars-Sinai investigators have identified several steps in a cellular process responsible for triggering one of the body’s important inflammatory responses. Their findings, published in the peer-reviewed journal Science Immunology, open up possibilities for modulating the type of inflammation associated with several infections and inflammatory diseases. Specifically, the investigators have improved understanding of the steps that lead to the production of IL-1 beta, a potent inflammatory protein signal released during many inflammatory responses. “We now have a clearer understanding of the stepwise process that leads to the production of IL-1 beta,” said Andrea ...

New imaging technique is no last resort

New imaging technique is no last resort
2023-06-16
There are various ways to image biological samples on a microscopic level, and each has its own pros and cons. For the first time, a team of researchers, including those from the University of Tokyo, has combined aspects from two of the leading imaging techniques to craft a new method of imaging and analyzing biological samples. Its concept, known as RESORT, paves the way to observe living systems in unprecedented detail. For as long as humanity has been able to manipulate glass, we have used optical devices to peer at the microscopic world in ever increasing ...

Abnormalities in neurodevelopment could lay the foundations for Alzheimer’s disease

2023-06-16
In the cerebral cortex, neurogenesis – the formation of neural cells from stem cells – begins in the fetus from 5 weeks gestation and is almost complete by 28 weeks. It is a complex process with finely tuned mechanisms. “In humans, neurogenesis lasts particularly long compared with other species, explains Khadijeh Shabani, a post-doctoral researcher at Paris Brain Institute. Neural stem cells remain in a progenitor state for an extended period. Only later do they differentiate into glial cells, astrocytes, or oligodendrocytes that will form the architecture of the brain and spinal cord.” Until ...

Disorient the malaria parasite to prevent it from causing harm

Disorient the malaria parasite to prevent it from causing harm
2023-06-16
With almost 250 million cases a year, 621,000 of them fatal, malaria remains a major public health problem, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Malaria is a parasitic disease transmitted by mosquitoes and caused by a microbe of the genus Plasmodium. On its journey from mosquito to human, Plasmodium must adapt to the specificities of the many organs and cells it parasitizes. Microbes do not have sensory organs; instead, they have sensors made of proteins to detect molecules specific to the environments they colonize. While most living organisms share the same types of sensors, Plasmodium is an exception. Biologists at the University of Geneva (UNIGE) have identified a new type ...

Growing number of hypothyroidism patients receiving treatment other than levothyroxine

2023-06-16
The use of thyroid hormones other than the commonly prescribed hormone medicine levothyroxine to treat hypothyroidism, or underactive thyroid, is increasing, according to a study being presented Friday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill. “This is significant because the long-term health outcomes of these treatments are not as well known as levothyroxine,” said researcher Matthew Ettleson, M.D., of the University of Chicago in Chicago, Ill. The thyroid makes the hormones triiodothyronine ...

Prevalence of metabolic associated fatty liver disease is increasing

2023-06-16
CHICAGO—The percent of metabolic associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD), the leading global cause of liver disease, is increasing in U.S. adults, according to a study presented Friday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill. Mexican Americans consistently had the highest percentage of MAFLD, especially in 2018, although the prevalence of increase was higher among Whites, the study found. MAFLD, previously known as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), is fast becoming the most common indication ...

The global human day – A bird’s eye perspective

The global human day – A bird’s eye perspective
2023-06-16
Everyone has 24 hours per day. Across the global population of 8 billion people this adds up to approximately 190 billion human hours per day. How those hours are spent determines the impacts we have on our surroundings as well as how we experience life. To find out how people around the world use their time, a research team led by McGill University has gathered and analyzed information about both economic and non-economic activities in order to estimate, for the first time, what a day in the life of the world looks like. “At present, we are struggling to come to terms with global challenges, and that calls for fresh perspectives on how the world ...

Planned reform of EU pharmaceutical legislation: early market access and robust evidence need not be a contradiction

2023-06-16
The European Commission's stated aim is to improve access to innovative drugs at the national level throughout the EU. Firstly, according to the proposal for the reform of EU pharmaceutical legislation, there are still considerable differences in access between countries. Secondly, drug development has so far only been geared to a limited extent to the actual needs of patients. According to the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG), the latter point is in line with the perspective of the ...

Dads are key in supporting breastfeeding, safe infant sleep

2023-06-16
Findings highlight racial disparities in sudden unexpected infant death in the U.S.  Only 16% fathers followed all three AAP-recommended infant sleep practices Rates of breastfeeding initiation and breastfeeding at eight weeks were much higher among fathers who wanted their infant’s mother to breastfeed than those who did not or had no opinion CHICAGO --- Fathers can make a huge difference in whether an infant is breastfed and placed to sleep safely, according to a recent survey of new fathers led by scientists at Northwestern University and the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago.  The study included 250 fathers who ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Menopause drug reduces hot flashes by more than 70%, international clinical trial finds

FGF21 muscle hormone associated with slow ALS progression and extended survival

Hitting the right note: The healing power of music therapy in the cardiac ICU

Cardiovascular disease risk rises in Mexico, despite improved cholesterol control

Flexible optical touch sensor simultaneously pinpoints pressure strength and location

Achalasia diagnosis simplified to AI plus X-ray

PolyU scholars pioneer smart and sustainable personal cooling technologies to address global extreme heat

NIH grant aims for childhood vaccine against HIV

Menstrual cycle and long COVID: A relation confirmed

WMO report on global water resources: 2024 was characterized by both extreme drought and intense rainfall

New findings explain how a mutation in a cancer-related gen causes pulmonary fibrosis

Thermal trigger

SNU materials science and engineering team identifies reconstruction mechanism of copper alloy catalysts for CO₂ conversion

New book challenges misconceptions about evolution and our place in the tree of life

Decoding a decade of grouper grunts unlocks spawning secrets, shifts

Smart robots revolutionize structural health monitoring

Serum-derived hsa_circ_101555 as a diagnostic biomarker in non-hepatocellular carcinoma chronic liver disease

Korea University study identifies age 70 as cutoff for chemotherapy benefit in colorectal cancer

Study explores brain cell communication called ‘crosstalk’

4 beer and wine discoveries

Massage Therapy Foundation awards $299,465 research grant to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

Chung-Ang University develops chloride-resistant Ru nanocatalysts for sustainable hydrogen production from seawater

Afghanistan’s August 2025 earthquake reveals the cost of international isolation, UN scientists warn

Shortlist announced for Panmure House Prize

Small nuclear RNA base editing a safer alternative to CRISPR, UC San Diego researchers find

Can Hayabusa2 touchdown? New study reveals space mission’s target asteroid is tinier and faster than thought

Millisecond windows of time may be key to how we hear, study finds

Graz University of Technology opens up new avenues in lung cancer research with digital cell twin

Exoplanets are not water worlds

Study shows increasing ‘healthy competition’ between menu options nudges patients towards greener, lower-fat hospital food choices

[Press-News.org] UMass Amherst biostatistician developing statistical tools to predict breast cancer survival and inform targeted therapies
New methods funded by NIH grant will have broad use across chronic diseases