International partnership investigates causes of prostate cancer in East African men
United
Kingdom and Kenyan experts are leading a major new international
research project to investigate the causes of prostate cancer in East
African men.
Researchers
from the University of Birmingham, the University of Nottingham, and
the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) will investigate the
importance of
immune cells and immune signals in male patients in Kenya and the UK.
The
international team is backed by a £660,000 (Ksh.84,000,000) research
grant jointly awarded by the UK Medical Research Council and the Kenyan
National Research
Fund.
In
previous work, the team discovered that a protein called PRH stops
prostate cells from replicating and invading other tissues. They showed
that PRH controls the activity of many genes
important in allowing prostate cells to respond to signals from immune
cells and that as prostate cancer becomes more advanced the activity of
PRH is decreased.

The
new project will see researchers finding out how changes in the levels
and activity of PRH alter the response of prostate cells to immune
signals. The team will collect blood, urine, and
prostate tissue samples to determine PRH protein levels in men in Kenya
and in the UK. They will also measure the levels of inflammatory
signals and immune cells in the blood samples.
Project leader Dr Sheela Jayaraman, from the University of Birmingham Cancer and Genomic Sciences, said: “This project is the result of many years of work in this area and I am excited
that we ...
are joining forces with colleagues in Nottingham and Kenya to investigate this disease.
“Radiotherapy
and drug treatments are effective treatments for patients with
moderately advanced disease, but have serious side effects including
osteoporosis and bone fracture. In less
advanced cases treatment may be unnecessary as the cancer is unlikely
to spread. Better ways of identifying patients who need treatment and
better treatments would be of immense value to patients and result in
major cost savings.”
Prostate
cancer is the most common cancer in men and this disease has a
particularly high incidence in men of African origin. Around 47,000 new
cases are diagnosed each year in the UK and
this is increasing as men live longer. The incidence of prostate cancer
in Kenya and other low- and middle-income countries is also rising and
in these countries the cost of treatment and the cost of lives lost to
this disease are major barriers to economic
development. Inflammation in the prostate is common and an important
factor in prostate cancer, but inflammation can have many causes
including bacterial and viral infections and autoimmune responses.
Professor Kevin Gaston, from the University of Nottingham (UoN) Cancer Centre said:
“Prostate cancer is a global problem and we are proud to be part of
this new international project. This work will tell us whether measuring
levels of immune signals in blood and PRH in prostate cancer might be a
good way to predict which patients require
treatment.”
Dr Veronica Manduku, Deputy Director of the Kenya Medical Research Institute, said:
“This work to explore the role of PRH and inflammatory markers among
prostate cancer patients will help us to eventually develop strategies
to tailor treatments to those that require it most rather than provide
blanket treatments. This will also help us
manage costs of care’’
For
more information or a copy of the policy paper, please contact Tony
Moran, International Communications Manager, University of Birmingham
on +44 (0) 121 414 8254 or +44 (0)782 783 2312 or email
t.moran@bham.ac.uk . For out-of-hours enquiries, please call
+44 (0) 7789 921 165.
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