Skip to content
Andreas Josefsson and Karin Welén in the management for the project SPRINTR.
Andreas Josefsson and Karin Welén in the management for the project SPRINTR.

Press release -

Sjöberg Foundation millions for prostate cancer project

A project for more efficient treatment for aggressive non-metastatic prostate cancer, led by Umeå University and the University of Gothenburg with participation from several universities and university hospitals in Sweden and is now receiving SEK 21 million from the Sjöberg Foundation.

Almost half of all men who die of prostate cancer in Sweden were diagnosed with an aggressive cancer, which had not yet spread. Thus, there should have been opportunities to halt the progression, but today's treatments are often insufficient for this high-risk group.

"With the project, we hope to improve survival by becoming better at finding the treatment that works best for each individual patient," says Andreas Josefsson, urologist and associate professor at Umeå University, initiator and project leader.

In the project SPRINTR (Swedish PRostate cancer Initiative for Novel Treatment Regimens), the researchers will identify new biomarkers to be used and evaluated for their ability to best allocate patients to different treatment options in a platform for clinical trials. Information on the costs of analyses in relation to the effect of treatments will also be collected to see if it is economically viable to use in healthcare.

Another important goal of SPRINTR is to create a structure for data collection and patient follow-up that, in addition to the specific issue within SPRINTR, will be available for all prostate cancer studies in Sweden.

"The aim is that all men throughout the country who have a suspected prostate cancer will be asked to participate. Since Sweden has a relatively small population, it can otherwise take a long time to achieve sufficiently large studies," says Karin Welén, Gothenburg University, co-leader of the project.

Within SPRINTR, patients can then be specifically matched and invited to different studies, which facilitates recruitment to clinical studies and increases the opportunity for patients to participate, regardless of where in Sweden they live and are treated.

Every year, about 10,000 Swedes are diagnosed with prostate cancer. In many cases, the cancer is curable, but about 2,500 Swedish men die each year from prostate cancer. This makes prostate cancer the cancer that takes the most lives in Swedish men.

The project is led by Umeå University and the University of Gothenburg. Other participants are Karolinska Institutet, Lund University, Örebro University, Uppsala University, Linköping University and The KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Associated County Councils and SciLifeLab are also parts of the project. The grant of SEK 21 million from the Sjöberg Foundation is for three years, with the possibility of extension for a further seven years.

Read more about the project:
https://www.umu.se/en/research/projects/sprintr/

Read more about the Sjöberg Foundation
https://sjobergstiftelsen.se/enghem/

For more information, please contact
Andreas Josefsson
Associate Professor, Urologist
Wallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine, Umeå University, Umeå University Hospital
Phone: +46 70 380 53 95
E-mail: andreas.josefsson@umu.se

Karin Welén
Associate Professor
Sahlgrenska Center for Cancer, Research Department of Clinical Sciences, Division of Urology, University of Gothenburg
Phone: +46 70 610 22 31
E-mail: karin.welen@gu.se

Topics


Umeå University
Umeå University is one of Sweden’s largest institutions of higher education with over 37,000 students and 4,300 faculty and staff. The university is home to a wide range of high-quality education programmes and world-class research in a number of fields. Umeå University was also where the revolutionary gene-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 was discovered that has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

At Umeå University, distances are short. The university's unified campus encourages academic meetings, an exchange of ideas and interdisciplinary co-operation, and promotes a dynamic and open culture in which students and staff rejoice in the success of others.

Contacts

  • Josefsson-Welen
    Josefsson-Welen
    License:
    Media Use
    File format:
    .jpg
    Size:
    2000 x 1456, 587 KB
    Download
  • Andreas Josefsson
    Andreas Josefsson
    License:
    Media Use
    File format:
    .jpg
    Copyright:
    Fri för publicering i medier med angivande av källa
    Size:
    6720 x 4480, 7.05 MB
    Download