Stabroek News Sunday

Simple urine test may help early detection of brain tumors

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(Nagoya University) - A recent study by researcher­s at Nagoya University has revealed that microRNAs in urine could be a promising biomarker to diagnose brain tumors.

Their findings, published in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, have indicated that regular urine tests could help early detection and treatment of brain tumors, possibly leading to improved patient survival.

Early diagnosis of brain tumors is often difficult, partly because most people undergo a brain CT or MRI scan only after the onset of neurologic­al deficits, such as immobility of limbs, and incapabili­ty of speech. When brain tumors are detected by CT or MRI, in many cases, they have already grown too large to be fully removed, which could lower patients' survival rate. From this perspectiv­e, accurate, easy, and inexpensiv­e methods of early brain tumor detection are strongly desired.

As a diagnostic biomarker of cancerous tumors, microRNAs (tiny molecules of nucleic acid) have recently received considerab­le attention. MicroRNAs are secreted from various cells, and exist in a stable and undamaged condition within extracellu­lar vesicles in biological fluids like blood and urine. Nagoya University researcher­s focused on microRNAs in urine as a biomarker of brain tumors. "Urine can be collected easily without putting a burden on the human body," says Nagoya University Associate Professor Atsushi Natsume, a correspond­ing author of the study.

"Urine-based liquid biopsy hadn't been fully investigat­ed for patients with brain tumors, because none of the convention­al methodolog­ies can extract microRNAs from urine efficientl­y in terms of varieties and quantities. So, we decided to develop a device capable of doing it."

The new device they developed is equipped with 100 million zinc oxide nanowires, which can be sterilized and mass-produced, and is therefore suitable for actual medical use. The device can extract a significan­tly greater variety and quantity of microRNAs from only a milliliter of urine compared to convention­al methods.

Their analysis of microRNAs collected using the device from the urine of patients with brain tumors and non-cancer individual­s revealed that many microRNAs derived from brain tumors actually exist in urine in a stable condition.

Next, the researcher­s examined whether urinary microRNAs can serve as a biomarker of brain tumors, using their diagnostic model based on the expression of microRNAs in urine samples from patients with brain tumors and non-cancer individual­s.

The results showed that the model can distinguis­h the patients from non-cancer individual­s at a sensitivit­y of 100% and a specificit­y of 97%, regardless of the malignancy and size of tumors. The researcher­s thus concluded that microRNAs in urine is a promising biomarker of brain tumors.

The researcher­s hope that their findings will contribute to early diagnosis of aggressive types of brain cancer, like glioblasto­mas, as well as other types of cancer. Dr. Natsume says, "In the future, by a combinatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce and telemedici­ne, people will be able to know the presence of cancer, whereas doctors will be able to know the status of cancer patients just with a small amount of their daily urine."

 ??  ?? Nanowire scaffolds for the screening of microRNAs from patient-derived tumor-organoid and urine in patients with central nervous system tumors
Nanowire scaffolds for the screening of microRNAs from patient-derived tumor-organoid and urine in patients with central nervous system tumors

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