The Scotsman

Personalis­ed DNA blood test could track early breast cancer

- By JEMMA CREW newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A new blood test could be up to 100 times more sensitive at monitoring the progress of early stage breast cancer than existing tests, scientists believe.

The targeted digital sequencing (TARDIS) test analyses tiny fragments of tumour DNA in the bloodstrea­m and doctors hope they will be able to use it to track the effectiven­ess of early treatments.

It can detect “extremely low concentrat­ions” of cancer DNA at an earlier stage than existing blood tests, according to Dr Muhammed Murtaza, from the Translatio­nal Genomics Research Institute (Tgen) in Arizona, where the test was developed.

It could also prevent women from having unnecessar­y surgery to remove tumour residue after chemothera­py, with lower concentrat­ions in the blood suggesting that treatment has already been successful.

Breast cancer is the UK’S most common cancer, with around 55,000 women and 350 men being diagnosed each year.

Professor Carlos Caldas, director of the Breast Cancer Programme at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre, which contribute­d to the study, said: “This could be a game-changer.

“Instead of patients undergoing six to eight cycles of chemothera­py (15-21 weeks of treatment), after one or two cycles (3-6 weeks) we would use the TARDIS test to look for a significan­t drop in circulatin­g tumour DNA.

“If a drop was not detected, the treatment could be stopped or changed.”

The research is published in the Science Translatio­nal Medicine journal.

People with early-stage breast cancer can be treated with chemothera­py to shrink their tumour before having surgerytor­emoveanyre­maining cancer.

But experts say that no cancer cells are found in almost a third (30 per cent) of those who go under the knife after treatment.

The researcher­s hope it could be used to monitor the progressio­n of other cancers that are treated with drugs before surgery.

The test is more accurate than others because it looks for DNA sequences specific to each patient’s cancer, the researcher­s say.

A biopsy of the cancer is taken, its DNA sequenced and scientists then look for mutations common across all cancer cells.

The researcher­s analysed 80 blood samples from 33 women with early stage and locally advanced breast cancer.

They found that the concentrat­ion of tumour DNA in the bloodstrea­m of patients who had no breast cancer cells remaining at the point of surgery was lower than in those that did.

They will now carry out a study on more than 200 patients to further analyse what the test can show.

Prof Caldas added: “Finding cancer DNA in the blood is like looking for a needle in a haystack.

“But by developing a test that’s unique to each patient, and looking for mutations present across the entire tumour, we’ve made it much harder for the circulatin­g tumour DNA to hide, significan­tly increasing the chance of identifyin­g cancer relapses earlier.”

 ??  ?? 0 A new blood test can detect ‘extremely low concentrat­ions’ of cancer DNA
0 A new blood test can detect ‘extremely low concentrat­ions’ of cancer DNA

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