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NIH Launches Comprehensive Effort to Explore Cancer Genomics: The 
Cancer Genome Atlas Begins With Three-Year, $100 Million Pilot

Cancer Treatment
http://www.imhcaz.com/

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the National Human Genome 
Research Institute (NHGRI), both part of the National Institutes of 
Health (NIH), today launched a comprehensive effort to accelerate 
our understanding of the molecular basis of cancer through the 
application of genome analysis technologies, especially large-scale 
genome sequencing. The overall effort, called The Cancer Genome 
Atlas (TCGA), will begin with a pilot project to determine the 
feasibility of a full-scale effort to systematically explore the 
universe of genomic changes involved in all types of human cancer. 

"Now is the time to move forward with this pioneering initiative. 
Thanks to the tools and technologies developed by the Human Genome 
Project and recent advances in using genetic information to improve 
cancer diagnosis and treatment, it is now possible to envision a 
systematic effort to map the changes in the human genetic blueprint 
associated with all known forms of cancer," said NIH Director Elias 
A. Zerhouni, M.D. "This atlas of genomic changes will provide new 
insights into the biological basis of cancer, which in turn will 
lead to new tests to detect cancer in its early, most treatable 
stages; new therapies to target cancer at its most vulnerable 
points; and, ultimately, new strategies to prevent cancer."

NCI and NHGRI announced today at a news conference in Washington, 
D.C., that they have each committed $50 million over three years to 
the TCGA Pilot Project. The project will develop and test the 
complex science and technology framework needed to systematically 
identify and characterize the genetic mutations and other genomic 
changes associated with cancer. The pilot will involve a few types 
of cancer that will be chosen for their value in helping to 
determine the feasibility of a possible larger-scale project. The 
process for determining the types of cancers to be studied is 
currently underway.

Cancer is now understood to include more than 200 different 
diseases. In all forms of cancer, genomic changes -- often specific 
to a particular type or stage of cancer -- cause disruptions within 
cellular pathways that result in uncontrolled cell growth. TCGA will 
delve more deeply into the genetic origins leading to this complex 
set of diseases, and, in doing so, will create new discoveries and 
tools that will provide the basis for a new generation of cancer 
therapies, diagnostics, and preventive strategies. 

"The goal of studying the human genome has always been to improve 
human health. The Cancer Genome Atlas Pilot Project represents 
another bold step in that direction," said National Human Genome 
Research Institute Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. "Such an 
ambitious venture requires significant planning. Given the genetic 
complexity of cancer, we are certain to face many daunting 
challenges in this pilot. But by pulling together some of the best 
minds in the cancer and genomics research communities, I am 
confident that the pilot will succeed, and we will go on to develop 
an atlas that will accelerate cancer research in ways we cannot even 
imagine today."

NCI Deputy Director Anna D. Barker, Ph.D., said, "The Cancer Genome 
Atlas Pilot Project is a revolutionary step in cancer medicine that 
leverages advances in cancer biology, genomics technologies, 
biorepositories, and bioinformatics for the ultimate benefit of 
cancer patients. Key challenges for the TCGA Pilot Project include 
not only addressing cancer's complexity, but also developing the 
technologies to advance the science of cancer genetics. A better 
understanding of cancer genetics is part of the overall effort to 
eliminate the suffering and death due to cancer." 

Data and technologies produced by other genomic projects have 
provided the tools necessary to produce new insights into how and 
why genetic changes cause cancer. The Human Genome Project, an 
international effort led in the United States by NHGRI and the 
Department of Energy, was completed in April 2003 and provided a 
reference DNA sequence of the human genome. The Human Genome Project 
also helped to advance sequencing technologies and paved the way for 
other genome-based research tools, including a comprehensive map of 
human genetic variation, or haplotypes, recently produced by the 
International HapMap Consortium. 

Genetic mutations linked to breast cancer, colon cancer, melanoma, 
and other cancers already have led to diagnostic tests that can 
point to the most effective intervention. Recent discoveries in 
cancer genomics have helped to identify several treatments that work 
by targeting cancer cells with a specific genetic change, such as 
Gleevec®, a drug for chronic myeloid leukemia and gastrointestinal 
stromal tumors, and Herceptin®, a drug for one form of breast 
cancer. These successful developments support further examination of 
the molecular origins of cancer to more quickly develop new tools to 
diagnose, treat, and prevent cancer. 

In the TCGA Pilot Project, a Human Cancer Biospecimen Core Resource 
will support the collection, processing, and distribution of 
cancerous and healthy, control tissue samples to Cancer Genome 
Characterization Centers and Genome Sequencing Centers. The genes 
and other genomic targets identified will be sequenced by the Cancer 
Genome Sequencing Centers using high-throughput methods similar to 
those employed in the Human Genome Project. The Cancer Genome Atlas 
Pilot Project seeks to identify genetic mutations in the DNA code 
that are specifically associated with the type of cancer being 
sequenced. In addition, the Cancer Genome Characterization Centers 
will work to identify other types of larger-scale genomic changes, 
such as copy number changes and/or chromosomal translocations, that 
contribute to cancer development and/or progression.

These data from TCGA Centers will be deposited in public databases 
supported by NCI's cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG™) and 
the National Library of Medicine's National Center for Biotechnology 
Information. As in the Human Genome Project, TCGA data will be made 
available to the worldwide research community. This data will 
provide researchers and clinicians with an early glimpse of what is 
hoped will evolve into an unprecedented, comprehensive "atlas" of 
information describing the genomes of all cancers. This atlas will 
enable researchers throughout the world to analyze and use the data 
in their own research to develop new diagnostics and therapies for 
different cancers. 

Recognizing that not all technologies needed for high-throughput, 
cost-effective analysis of the cancer genome are already in hand, 
TCGA also will support new technology development. Some of these 
methods will focus on improving current genomic analysis 
technologies, while others will emphasize new approaches, such as 
epigenomics. Epigenomics looks at how various small molecules, such 
as methyl groups, when added or removed from DNA, can have profound 
effects on gene function.

Each component of the TCGA Pilot Project will have clear milestones 
and goals. Only if the pilot achieves its goals will the full-scale 
project to develop a complete atlas of the cancer genome move 
forward. 

The Cancer Genome Characterization Centers, Genome Sequencing 
Centers, and Biospecimen Core Resources will be selected in 2006. 
Applications and proposals will be reviewed by experts in the field, 
and awards will be based on merit and programmatic needs of The 
Cancer Genome Atlas Pilot Project. 


####

NCI and NHGRI are two of the 27 institutes and centers at NIH, an 
agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 

For more details about The Cancer Genome Atlas, including Q&As, a 
graphic, a glossary, a brief guide to genomics, and a media library 
of available images, please go to http://cancergenome.nih.gov.

For more information about cancer and the National Cancer Institute, 
please visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov, or call 
NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237). 

Additional information about NHGRI can be found at its Web site, 
http://www.genome.gov. 



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