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Encyclopedia > Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center is an institution in the Cascade neighborhood of Seattle, Washington engaged in scientific research towards the prevention and treatment of cancer. It also treats patients directly, mostly via bone marrow and stem cell transplantation. Its president is Leland H. Hartwell, winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine. On the staff is Linda B. Buck, winner of the 2004 prize.


The Hutch, as it is known locally, grew out of the Pacific Northwest Research Foundation, founded in 1956 by Dr. William Hutchinson, which was dedicated to the study of heart surgery, cancer, and diseases of the endocrine system.


In 1964, Dr. Hutchinson's brother Fred Hutchinson, who had been a baseball player for the Seattle Rainiers and Detroit Tigers and later managed the Rainiers, the Tigers, the St. Louis Cardinals, and the Cincinnati Reds, died of lung cancer. The next year, Dr. Hutchinson established the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center as a division of the Pacific Northwest Research Foundation. The FHCRC split off from its parent foundation in 1972, and the physical center was opened in 1975.


Famed astronomer Carl Sagan was a patient at the Hutch during his last illness.


In 2004 Elaine Ostrander and Leonid Kruglyak, both of the Hutch research center, published a studyindirectly (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/21/science/21dog.html?ex=1400472000&en=6b49c839cde80d81&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND) confirming and greatly expanding upon work published in 2003 by Finnish geneticist Mikko T. Koskinen, who reported some success in using DNA to distinguish among five different dog breeds.


Dr. Ostrander's work was based on DNA samples from 414 dogs representing 85 of the 152 breeds recognized by the American Kennel Club. The research team took samples from 96 locations on the dog genome. Using variations in the DNA sequences from those locations, they were able to assign all but 4 of the 414 dogs to their proper breed. (In one instance they "identified" a beagle as a "perro presa de Canario"--a large, mastiff-like dog often used for guarding and fighting.) The study was published in May 2004 in Science.


External links

  • http://www.fhcrc.org

Ostrander and Kruglyak genetic research (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/21/science/21dog.html?ex=1400472000&en=6b49c839cde80d81&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (453 words)
The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center is an institution in the Cascade neighborhood of Seattle, Washington engaged in scientific research towards the prevention and treatment of cancer.
The Hutch, as it is known locally, grew out of the Pacific Northwest Research Foundation, founded in 1956 by Dr. William Hutchinson, which was dedicated to the study of heart surgery, cancer, and diseases of the endocrine system.
The FHCRC split off from its parent foundation in 1972, and the physical center was opened in 1975.
NCCN Institution Profile - Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (5147 words)
Fred Hutchinson is an independent, nonprofit research institution devoted to the elimination of cancer as a cause of human suffering and death.
Fred Hutchinson, in collaboration with its clinical and research partners, UW Medicine, and Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical Center, is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center in the Pacific Northwest and is one of 38 nationwide.
Cancer risk is estimated based on the findings of the laboratory, published information about the mutation and condition, including that from database repositories, the patient's personal and family history, lifestyle factors, empiric data, and risk models such as the Claus and Gail models when appropriate.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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