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Cancer Research Center of Hawaii


Laurence N. Kolonel, M.D., Ph.D.
Center Deputy Director, Cancer Research Center of Hawai‘i;
Professor of Public Health, John A. Burns School of Medicine;
Graduate Faculty, Biomedical Sciences Interdisciplinary Graduate Program;
Graduate Faculty in Food Science and Human Nutrition
M.D., Harvard Medical School;
M.P.H. and Ph.D. (Epidemiology), University of California at Berkeley;
Board Certified in General Preventive Medicine
lkolonel@crch.hawaii.edu
 

Publication list via PubMed

My research interests during many years have centered on understanding the striking variations in cancer incidence and survival that are observed among the several different ethnic populations in Hawai‘i. This work began in the mid-1970's when I joined the newly formed epidemiology research program at the Cancer Research Center of Hawai‘i. We felt that important clues to cancer etiology might emerge from epidemiologic studies in this unique environment.

In early studies of changing cancer risks among migrant populations, we showed that incidence rates in first generation migrants from Japan and the U.S. mainland were often remarkably higher (or lower) than the prevailing rates in their place of origin. Moreover, these changes were progressive from the first to the second generation (born in Hawai‘i). These findings added considerable weight to the premise that most cancers are environmentally determined. Accordingly, we concentrated much of our subsequent research on the role of lifestyle variables in the etiology of cancer, with a particular emphasis on nutritional factors. Several early ecologic and case-control studies in this unique population setting helped establish the importance of diet and nutrition in cancer etiology (e.g., Br J Cancer 1981;44:332-39; Int J Cancer 1983;32:727-32; Am J Epidemiol 1984;119:227-37; J Natl Cancer Inst 1987;78:595-600; Cancer Res 1987;47:2982-5; Am J Epidemiol 1988;127:999-1012).

Despite the encouraging results of many of these studies, we found that even known risk factors for certain cancers, such as cigarette smoking for lung cancer, could not fully account for the observed differences in incidence among the several ethnic groups in Hawai‘i. Furthermore, some of the changes in risk we observed among migrants were greater than one would have expected from lifestyle alterations alone. To further our research on diet, nutrition and cancer, and to better explore some of these anomalous findings, we established a large multiethnic cohort in 1993-1996 for long-term follow-up (Kolonel et al. Am J Epidemiol 2000;151: 346-357). To enhance the value of this research, we included ethnic groups from California (African-Americans, and Latinos) as well as from Hawai‘i (Japanese-Americans, whites, and Native Hawai‘ians). The cohort includes more than 215,000 participants of both sexes, on whom extensive baseline questionnaire data have been collected, including a detailed quantitative dietary history. In addition, biological specimens have been collected from approximately 70,000 cohort participants to form a unique biorepository of blood and urine samples. Most of our current research is utilizing this cohort resource. The work is multidisciplinary, and includes a substantial molecular epidemiology component.

In the Multiethnic Cohort, we are examining the relationship of dietary variables, such as flavonoids, to the risk of cancer of several sites across different ethnic groups. We are also examining genetic markers of susceptibility and other molecular markers of diet and nutrition for their impact on cancer risk. The interaction of dietary exposures with genetic susceptibility in determining cancer risk is a major goal of the research. We are also engaged in several genome-wide association studies (GWAS), each focusing on a distinct ethnic population. We feel that the potential for understanding the etiology of cancer through studies of ethnic and migrant populations has never been greater.

Active Grants

L. Kolonel, Principal Investigator
R37 CA 54281
“Multiethnic Cohort Study of Diet and Cancer"
March 1, 2008-February 28, 2013

L. Kolonel, Principal Investigator
P01 CA 33619
“Epidemiologic Studies of Diet and Cancer in Hawai‘i"
July 1, 2000-June 30, 2009

Selected Publications
Epplein M, Nomura AM, Hankin JH, Blaser MJ, Perez-Perez G, Stemmermann GN, Wilkens LR, Kolonel LN. Association of Helicobacter pylori infection and diet on the risk of gastric cancer: a case-control study in Hawai‘i. Cancer Causes Control 2008;19(8):869-77.

Park SY, Murphy SP, Wilkens LR, Nomura AMY, Henderson BE, Kolonel LN.  Calcium and vitamin D intake and risk of colorectal cancer: the Multiethnic Cohort Study. Am J Epidemiol 2007;165(7):784-93.

Haiman CA, Le Marchand L, Yamamoto J, Stram DO, Sheng X, Kolonel LN, Wu AH, Reich D, Henderson BE. A common genetic risk factor for colorectal and prostate cancer. Nat Genet 2007;39(8):954-956.

Nomura AMY, Hankin JH, Henderson BE, Wilkens LR, Murphy SP, Pike MC, Le Marchand L, Stram DO, Monroe KR, Kolonel LN.  Dietary fiber and colorectal cancer risk: the multiethnic cohort study.  Cancer Causes Control 2007;18:753-764.

Nöthlings U, Murphy SP, Wilkens LR, Henderson BE, Kolonel LN. Flavonols and pancreatic cancer risk: the multiethnic cohort study. Am J Epidemiol 2007;166(8):924-31.

Kolonel LN, Altshuler D, Henderson BE. The Multiethnic Cohort Study: Exploring Genes, Lifestyle and Cancer Risk. Nature Reviews Cancer 2004;4:1-9.

 


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