DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Inflammation has been hypothesized to be involved in the etiology of multiple cancers, and emerging evidence has implicated an important role of chronic inflammation, due to both biologic agents and other causes, suggesting that cancer is a situation of unhealed infection. This Career Development Award will provide Dr. Epplein, a tenure-track Assistant Professor of Epidemiology at Vanderbilt University, with the training needed to further her career in the research of infection and inflammation as they relate to cancer risk. While Dr. Epplein has had excellent training in epidemiological methodology, statistical analysis, and scientific writing during her doctoral and post-doctoral experiences, she requires further training to gain expertise in her chosen research area of inflammation and cancer. The specific project proposed in this award, focusing on Helicobacter pylori, host inflammatory cytokines, and gastric cancer risk, will serve as a training opportunity so that Dr. Epplein can expand her expertise and become a leader in the study of infection, inflammation, and cancer. For this training project, she could not be better served than by the experts in molecular epidemiology (Wei Zheng), gastric cancer (Pelayo Correa), and H. pylori biology (Richard Peek) at Vanderbilt University. Her research plan seeks to further our understanding of the etiology of gastric cancer, the second most common cause of death from cancer worldwide, through analyses of host and bacterial factors in a high-risk population. H. pylori, a gram-negative spiral bacterium that resides in the stomach of approximately half of the world's population and is generally acquired in childhood, is currently the strongest known risk factor for gastric cancer.1-4 And, while the proteins CagA and VacA that are found in some strains of H. pylori have been consistently identified as virulence factors, very recent new research exploring the diversity of H. pylori has revealed 15 distinct H. pylori proteins. At the same time, a strong association has been seen between host inflammatory profile and gastric cancer risk, suggesting that it is the combination of H. pylori strain-specific infection and host inflammatory response that creates the fertile ground for which gastric cancer to grow. To study these complex relationships, Dr. Epplein will conduct a nested case-control study within the Shanghai Health Studies to investigate the association of gastric cancer risk with: 1) H. pylori strain-specific infections; 2) host systemic inflammatory cytokines; and 3) the potential interactions between H. pylori infection and host inflammatory cytokines. Ultimately this research aims to aid in more appropriately assessing overall risk to identify high-risk subjects for primary and secondary prevention of gastric cancer. With the knowledge and experience provided by this CDA, Dr. Epplein will be prepared to secure the funding necessary to establish a multidisciplinary research program on gastric cancer etiology, expanding her research on this subject to other high-risk populations such as low-income African Americans. Furthermore, it will give her the basis to establish an independent long-term career focusing more broadly on infection, inflammation, and cancer.