
Immune System Discovery: New Strategy May Stop Breast Cancer
BRI researchers Emma Kuan, PhD, and Steven Ziegler, PhD, have pinpointed how the protein, called thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP), causes breast cancer tumors to survive and grow.

Living Well With Disease
Lauren remembers clearly the day she learned that her diseases were all autoimmune diseases. “I went to a talk by the former head of BRI, Dr.

Mystery Of Multiple Autoimmune Diseases
Lauren Lippincott is not yet 35 years old, yet she lives with five autoimmune diseases. She’s not alone. About 25 percent of people with autoimmune diseases have a tendency to develop additional autoimmune diseases.

Run and Get Screened for Type 1 Diabetes Research!
Did you know family members of people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) have a 15 times greater risk of developing the disease themselves? And did you know that all it takes to find out if you are at risk of developing T1D is a simple risk screening?

Celebrities with Lupus: Raising Voices and Awareness
If you ask two different people what they know about lupus, odds are you could get completely different responses. Why? Because lupus is notoriously hard to identify, and its complexity is often misunderstood. Just check out how many different types there are, and you’ll start to get an idea.
Fighting Type 1 Diabetes: One Blood Draw at a Time
As a research nurse practitioner, I provide care for children and adults participating in type 1 diabetes research at Benaroya Research Institute.

Food Allergies Around the World: What We Know, and What We Don’t
If you’re one of the 220 to 520 million people around the world living with a food allergy, odds are you have to think about it every day (World Allergy Organization, 47).

Women Living (and Thriving) with Autoimmune Diseases: Meet Chris Boerner
Chris Boerner was diagnosed with Myasthenia Gravis when she was 14 years old. If you don’t know what that is, it’s probably one of the most unwelcome things to happen to a young girl just starting high school.

Anguish to Advocate: Making a Difference in Ulcerative Colitis Research
Awaiting a colonoscopy in a Tri-Cities, Wash., emergency room was the last place Angie Neal expected to find herself. The 33-year-old Olympia native was the epitome of health: she exercised regularly, ate healthy foods and had never been overweight.

How we Roll with type 1 diabetes
Like many people with a connection to a chronic disease, I do my best to keep up with news about trials and studies that could, just maybe, yield new preventions and treatments. Unfortunately, science does not always succeed in the traditional sense.