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Early Detection of Lung Cancer: New Blood Protein Biomarker

by Gandhi on September 20, 2007 at 7:40 PM
Early Detection of Lung Cancer: New Blood Protein Biomarker

A blood protein that is present in all stages of lung cancer has been identified by a team of researchers. The protein is not present otherwise and the researchers believe that testing for this protein might help physicians decide whether smokers or others at high risk for lung cancer should be referred for lung imaging.

"A diagnostic blood test to screen high-risk individuals for lung cancer could be both practical to use and cost-effective," said investigators from Panacea Pharmaceuticals, Inc., of Gaithersburg, Md.

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"A positive test for this protein marker, followed by CT scanning, may help identify individuals with lung cancer at a stage in which treatment is more effective, possibly even curative," said research scientist Mark Semenuk.

The protein targeted in the blood test is Human Aspartyl (Asparaginyl) ß-Hydroxylase (HAAH), which Panacea Pharmaceutical researchers say is abnormally expressed on the surface of cancer cells, compared to normal cells, where it resides inside the cell body. HAAH is also found in the serum of individuals with cancer.
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"The protein recognizes cell surface growth factors and modifies them, Semenuk said.

Pushing the cells into uncontrolled growth. It is likely that increased expression of HAAH is an early step in cancer development, since all stages of lung cancer express roughly the same level of the protein compared to adjacent normal cells.

"Thus detection of HAAH in the bloodstream can detect lung cancer before it becomes symptomatic," he said.

Staining of normal versus cancer cells has found that HAAH is expressed in a wide range of carcinomas, including lung cancer, Semenuk reports.

In this study, researchers found that 99 percent of 160 patients who represented all stages and various types of lung cancer, had high levels of HAAH protein in their blood, but only nine percent of 93 non-smokers without lung cancer had a positive HAAH blood test.

"In a group of 50 smokers not known to have cancer, four patients had levels of HAAH that were higher than the projected "cut-off" line established between cancer development and no disease," Semenuk said.

It is not known, however, whether these four people did eventually develop lung cancer, because the samples were provided for study without access to patient records, and further tests may change that cut-off point, he adds.

"These results are very encouraging, because it points to those patients who are most likely to need further testing," Semenuk said.

"Elevated levels of HAAH cannot confirm whether a person has lung cancer, but can be used as a routine screening test for recommending further diagnostic evaluation. That is the way most cancer biomarker tests, like the PSA or CEA, are meant to work, and this may be one of the most effective to date," he added.

Source: ANI
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