logo

English
                 
 

JULY 17, 2017

Top News in Gastroenterology#4 of 8 

Blood test for early detection of pancreatic cancer headed to clinic

Penn Medicine News

A newly identified biomarker panel could pave the way to earlier detection and better treatment for pancreatic cancer, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at University of Pennsylvania. Currently over 53,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer – the fourth leading cause of cancer death – every year. The blood biomarkers, detailed in the journal Science Translational Medicine, correctly detected pancreatic cancer in blood samples from patients at different stages of their disease.

The majority of pancreatic cancer patients are not diagnosed until an advanced stage, beyond the point at which their tumors can be surgically removed.

A team led by Ken Zaret, PhD, director of the Penn Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the Joseph Leidy Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology, and Gloria Petersen, PhD, from the Mayo Clinic, identified a pair of biomarkers that physicians could soon use to discover the disease earlier. “Starting with our cell model that mimics human pancreatic cancer progression, we identified released proteins, then tested and validated a subset of these proteins as potential plasma biomarkers of this cancer,” Zaret said. The authors anticipate that health care providers will use the early–detection biomarkers to test for their presence and levels in blood from pancreatic cancer patients and blood drawn from individuals with a high risk of developing pancreatic cancer, including those who have a first–degree relative with pancreatic cancer, are genetically predisposed to the disease, or who had a sudden onset of diabetes after the age of 50.

“Early detection of cancer has had a critical influence on lessening the impact of many types of cancer, including breast, colon, and cervical cancer. A long standing concern has been that patients with pancreatic cancer are often not diagnosed until it is too late for the best chance at effective treatment,” said Robert Vonderheide, MD, DPhil, director of the Abramson Cancer Center (ACC) at the University of Pennsylvania. “Having a biomarker test for this disease could dramatically alter the outlook for these patients.”

The biomarker panel, enabled by discovery work of first author Jungsun Kim, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in Zaret’s lab, builds on a first–of–its–kind human–cell model of pancreatic cancer progression the lab described in 2013. They used stem–cell technology to create a cell line from a patient with advanced pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Genetically reprogramming late–stage human cancer cells to a stem–cell state enabled them to force the reprogrammed cells to progress to an early cancerous state, revealing secreted blood biomarkers of early–stage disease along the way. The best candidate biomarker, plasma thrombospondin–2 (THBS2), was screened against 746 cancer and control plasma samples using an inexpensive, commercially available protein–detection assay. The team found that blood levels of THBS2, combined with levels of a known later–stage biomarker called CA19–9, was reliable at detecting the presence of pancreatic cancer in patients.

The team refined the assay with independent investigations of plasma samples from patients with different stages of cancer, from individuals with benign pancreatic disease, and from healthy controls, all obtained from Petersen, who directs the biospecimen resource program for pancreas research at the Mayo Clinic.

“Positive results for THBS2 or CA19–9 concentrations in the blood consistently and correctly identified all stages of the cancer,” Zaret said. “Notably, THBS2 concentrations combined with CA19–9 identified early stages better than any other known method.” The combination panel also improved the ability to distinguish cases of cancer from pancreatitis. The panel will next be validated in a setYou 

No. Subject Date Author Last Update Views
Notice How to write your comments onto a webpage [2] 2016.07.06 운영자 2016.11.20 18194
Notice How to Upload Pictures in webpages 2016.07.06 운영자 2018.10.19 32349
Notice How to use Rich Text Editor [3] 2016.06.28 운영자 2018.10.19 5928
Notice How to Write a Webpage 2016.06.28 운영자 2020.12.23 43842
3404 [Medical] Herpes Zoster and CV events [2] 2017.07.21 이한중*65 2017.07.21 57
3403 Trump-Russia Gate; How all this started? [2] 2017.07.20 온기철*71 2017.07.21 51
3402 '신발 한 짝' (The Other Pair) - 감동 Movie [7] 2017.07.17 운영자 2017.07.21 628
3401 [Medical] Coffee Consumption and Mortality [1] 2017.07.21 이한중*65 2017.07.22 58
» [Medical] Blood Test enables Early Detection of Pancreatic Ca [4] 2017.07.22 이한중*65 2017.07.22 130
3399 [LPGA] 김인경,마라톤 클래식 우승…태극낭자군단, 10승째 합작 [5] 2017.07.23 황규정*65 2017.07.23 61
3398 Iceland 이야기 [9] 2017.07.16 이건일*68 2017.07.24 130
3397 Memory 2017.07.23 김성철*67 2017.07.24 90
3396 Climb of Mt. Whitney, 2016 #2 2017.04.25 운영자 2017.07.30 144
3395 Climb of Mt. Whitney, 2016 #3 file 2017.04.25 운영자 2017.07.30 115
3394 Climb of Mt. Whitney, 2016 #4 2017.04.25 운영자 2017.07.30 564
3393 [LPGA] Mi Hyang Lee Comes From 9-Strokes Back On Weekend to Win Ladies Scottish Open [6] 2017.07.30 황규정*65 2017.07.30 227
3392 북한 ICBM 실험 성공: 남한과 미국의 이해 관계는? [2] 2017.07.31 온기철*71 2017.07.31 103
3391 [Medical] Subtyping Parkinson's Disease 2017.07.31 이한중*65 2017.08.01 133
3390 [LPGA] '벌써 11승' 한국 女골프, 시즌 최다승 향한 무한질주 [6] 2017.07.30 황규정*65 2017.08.01 46
3389 독도 그려진 '대동여지도' 필사본 일본서 또 발견 [2] 2017.08.01 황규정*65 2017.08.02 55
3388 [Medical]A Breakthrough in Gene Editing [2] 2017.08.02 이한중*65 2017.08.02 46
3387 The Loyal Engineers and the Voyagers 2017.08.03 이한중*65 2017.08.03 64
3386 "Underground Railroad" for North Koreans 2017.08.05 이한중*65 2017.08.05 175
3385 [LPGA] 김인경, 브리티시 오픈서 생애 첫 메이저 타이, 통산 7승 [11] 2017.08.06 황규정*65 2017.08.07 118