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Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, Receives Grant for Early Detection of Prostate Cancer


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Peter Carroll, MD, MPH

The ZERO Cancer Research Fund has awarded the Jim Lafferty Memorial Research Grant in the amount of $45,000 to Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, of the University of California San Francisco, for the purpose of researching new and improved methods for early detection of prostate cancer. The grant is part of the ZERO Cancer Research Fund, which is charged with supporting innovative, high-reward research that offers the best return on investment for patients and families fighting prostate cancer.

Identifying Aggressive vs Nonaggressive Disease

“Dr. Carroll’s research addresses an important challenge in diagnosing prostate cancer—the ability to distinguish aggressive from nonaggressive disease,” said ZERO’s CEO ­Jamie Bearse. “This promising research will give men and families more options when deciding how best to treat their prostate cancer.”

Dr. Carroll’s research includes developing a low-cost mechanism to ensure men diagnosed with low-risk disease that immediate treatment is not necessary. He proposes to do this at substantially lower cost when compared to commercially available genomic classifiers—a technique that can be done in almost all pathology laboratories around the world.

Heart of Early Detection

“My research is at the heart of early detection and addresses the major criticism of early detection—overdetection—which in the United States leads to overtreatment,” said Dr. ­Carroll.

The Jim Lafferty Memorial Research Grant was made through the ZERO Cancer Research Fund and came from a partnership between ZERO—The End of Prostate Cancer and Shining Down, a nonprofit founded by Jennifer Lafferty and Tamara Wyman in memory and honor of their husband and dear friend, Jim Lafferty, who lost his battle with prostate cancer in 2010 at the young age of 40.

Promising Research and Education

“We are absolutely thrilled to grant these funds to Dr. Carroll for early detection research,” said Tamara Gardner. “Jim’s passion was to educate men of all ages and their families about prostate cancer and treatment options. We’re honoring his memory by supporting this promising research that can help men and families.”

The ZERO Cancer Research Fund aims to raise funds and issue grants to focus on early detection and other diagnostic tools that can determine aggressive and nonaggressive prostate cancer. To learn more and support the ZERO Cancer Research Fund, visit www.zerocancer.org/zero-research-fund. ■


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