The Asian Age

Blood test to diagnose five deadly cancers?

-

Scientists in the US have identified a common genomic signature in tumour DNA that is shared by five different kinds of cancer. The finding could lead to the developmen­t of a simple blood test that might be able to diagnose a variety of cancers at early stages.

This telltale signature results from a chemical modificati­on of DNA called methylatio­n, which controls the expression of genes. Having identified this methylatio­n biomarker, scientists uncovered consistent evidence of it in five different kinds of tumours: Colon, lung, breast, stomach, and endometria­l cancers.

“Finding a distinctiv­e methylatio­n- based signature is like looking for a spruce tree in a pine forest,” said computatio­nal biologist Laura Elnitski from the US National Human Genome Research Institute ( NHGRI). “It’s a technical challenge to identify, but we found an elevated methylatio­n signature around the gene known as ZNF154 that is unique to tumours.”

The findings, reported in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostic­s, build upon previous research by Elnitski’s team, which initially detected methylatio­n signatures around ZNF154 in 2013 and suspected it as a possible universal cancer biomarker.

In the new research, the scientists developed a series of steps that uncovered the signature in a variety of tumours. The team used a technique called polymerase chain reaction to amplify DNA taken from tumours and analysed the results, finding elevated levels of ZNF154 across the different tumour types.

Sifting through huge amounts of genomic data to find the markers wasn’t easy, but isolating the signature was worth the effort.

“Finding the methylatio­n signature was an incredibly arduous and valuable process,” said NHGRI scientific director Dan Kastner. “These findings could be an important step in developing a test to identify early cancers through a blood test.”

The researcher­s will now be looking at whether the signature can be used to identify cancers in blood samples from patients with bladder, breast, colon, pancreatic, and prostate cancers. They will also investigat­e whether their method of analysis leads to improved outcomes in women with ovarian cancers, via better detection of recurrent cancer cells.

Researcher­s will now look at whether the signature can be used to identify cancers in blood samples from patients with bladder, breast, colon, pancreatic, and prostate cancers

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India