Just a blood test that rules out cancer will be very important and very welcome. Far too much of the disease systems we encounter need to become obvious and often dangerous before we actually intervene. Been able every five years to actually check on this will be a revolution in medicine.
Far better, if one is positive, benign interventions are then available to suppress the tendency then and there to prevent actual emergence.
Thus even without a cure for cancer it is practical to hugely reduce the number of victims. It is certain that this will become insurance practice as soon as it is available..
Potential 'universal' blood test for cancer discovered
Published: Mon 28 Jul 2014
http://www.bradford.ac.uk/mediacentre/news-releases/blood-test-for-cancer.php
Researchers from the University of Bradford have
devised a simple blood test that can be used to diagnose whether people
have cancer or not.
The test will enable doctors to rule out cancer in patients
presenting with certain symptoms, saving time and preventing costly and
unnecessary invasive procedures such as colonoscopies and biopsies being
carried out. Alternatively, it could be a useful aid for investigating
patients who are suspected of having a cancer that is currently hard to
diagnose.
Early results have shown the method gives a high degree of accuracy
diagnosing cancer and pre-cancerous conditions from the blood of
patients with melanoma, colon cancer and lung cancer. The research is
published online in FASEB Journal, the US journal of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology.
The Lymphocyte Genome Sensitivity (LGS) test looks at white blood
cells and measures the damage caused to their DNA when subjected to
different intensities of ultraviolet light (UVA), which is known to
damage DNA. The results of the empirical study show a clear distinction
between the damage to the white blood cells from patients with cancer,
with pre-cancerous conditions and from healthy patients.
Professor Diana Anderson, from the University’s School of Life
Sciences led the research. She said: “White blood cells are part of the
body’s natural defence system. We know that they are under stress when
they are fighting cancer or other diseases, so I wondered whether
anything measureable could be seen if we put them under further stress
with UVA light.We found that people with cancer have DNA which is more
easily damaged by ultraviolet light than other people, so the test shows
the sensitivity to damage of all the DNA – the genome – in a cell.”
The study looked at blood samples taken from 208 individuals.
Ninety-four healthy individuals were recruited from staff and students
at the University of Bradford and 114 blood samples were collected from
patients referred to specialist clinics within Bradford Royal Infirmary
prior to diagnosis and treatment. The samples were coded, anonymised,
randomised and then exposed to UVA light through five different depths
of agar.
The UVA damage was observed in the form of pieces of DNA being pulled
in an electric field towards the positive end of the field, causing a
comet-like tail. In the LGS test, the longer the tail the more DNA
damage, and the measurements correlated to those patients who were
ultimately diagnosed with cancer (58), those with pre-cancerous
conditions (56) and those who were healthy (94).
“These are early results completed on three different types of cancer
and we accept that more research needs to be done; but these results so
far are remarkable,” said Professor Anderson. "Whilst the numbers of
people we tested are, in epidemiological terms, quite small, in
molecular epidemiological terms, the results are powerful. We’ve
identified significant differences between the healthy volunteers,
suspected cancer patients and confirmed cancer patients of mixed ages at
a statistically significant level of P
Professor Anderson believes that if the LGS proves to be a useful
cancer diagnostic test, it would be a highly valuable addition to the
more traditional investigative procedures for detecting cancer.
A clinical trial is currently underway at Bradford Royal Infirmary. This will investigate the effectiveness of the LGS test in correctly predicting which patients referred by their GPs with suspected colorectal cancer would, or would not, benefit from a colonoscopy – currently the preferred investigation method.
The University of Bradford has filed patents for the technology and a spin-out company, Oncascan, has been established to commercialise the research.
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