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Cancer: Test to identify patients
RESEARCHERS AT Jefferson Medical College may be close to
developing a simple, inexpensive and rapid test to help identify
those women with breast cancer who are at greatest risk of
carrying a damaged version of BRCA1 or BRCA2, genes predisposing
them to the hereditary form of the disease. The genes put women
with breast cancer at a much greater risk of developing other
cancers in the same or other breast, in addition to ovarian
cancer.
If the scientists, led by Bruce C. Turner, assistant professor of
radiation oncology at Jefferson Medical College and the Kimmel
Cancer Center of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, are
right, the test will help identify those patients with breast
cancer who need to be tested for alterations in these genes. He
presented his group's work at the annual meeting of the American
Society of Clinical Oncology in San Francisco.
"This is important because patients with breast cancer who have
mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 may be better candidates for certain
types of therapy," Dr. Turner says. "For example, they may be
better candidates for mastectomy than lumpectomy and radiation
therapy - also known as breast- conserving therapy. Those
patients electing breast conserving therapy need to have constant
monitoring not only of their treated breast but also their other
breast if they don't have a mastectomy on that side, and also of
their ovaries."
Dr. Turner and his colleagues may have an easy way for patients
with breast cancer to determine whether they should be tested for
alterations in the cancer genes. His team, along with help from
scientists at Coulter Pharmaceuticals in San Diego, has devised a
test using a special protein called a monoclonal antibody to
determine if BRCA1 is damaged. The antibody serves as a guided
missile aimed directly at the protein made by BRCA1. If the
antibody fails to find the normal protein, then this suggests
that the gene is damaged or missing, and sequencing should be
done.
"The thinking is, if we can develop a screening test for women
with a diagnosis of breast cancer - a screening test to determine
if they have a high probability of harboring an alteration in
BRCA1, then we could identify those patients at high risk for
inheriting the damaged gene," explains Dr. Turner. "These women
would then be counseled to go on to sequencing to find the exact
mutation that is causing the cancer."Currently, women with a
family history of breast cancer or ovarian cancer must undergo
genetic sequencing to determine if they carry damaged versions of
BRCA1 or BRCA2, which raises their risk of cancer to as much as
80 percent over their lifetime. But the testing takes several
weeks to complete and can be expensive. Most patients with breast
cancer who are at risk for mutations in the genes - about 5 to 10
percent or 10,000 to 20,000 women annually have such mutations -
do not undergo sequencing.
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Section : Science & Tech Previous : Heavy HIV levels found in newly infected patients' fluids Next : Research on Stem Cells: Policy guidelines needed? | |
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