Miami Herald (Sunday)

Biotech aims to detect cancer early, but tests have a long way to go

- BY PRANSHU VERMA

Biotechnol­ogy is full of tantalizin­g promises, but few as appealing as this: a test that can screen for any kind of cancer early, allowing patients to start treatment early and have a better chance at surviving.

These tests, often called multi-cancer early-detection tests, search for bits of DNA that are shed by tumor cells into the bloodstrea­m. This allows them to potentiall­y detect cancer before people have symptoms. If tests identify potential cancer, biopsies could be done to confirm where it is.

But scientists have faced challenges with the technology. Identifyin­g where a cancer comes from is scientific­ally complicate­d, though at least one company is using machine learning to solve that. And although early research shows that some private companies are finding success, many tests still struggle with accuracy.

President Biden has said he wants to foster research on these tests through his cancer “moonshot” initiative. He recently touted a government­funded clinical trial that will study the efficacy of multiple types of early-screening tests. The hope, Biden said, is that a tool comes out that can help halve cancer deaths in the United States within 25 years.

“Imagine a simple blood test during an annual physical that could detect cancer early,” he said.

In the United States, nearly 600,000 people die of cancer every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Detecting cancer early is one of the best ways to save lives, experts said. But few cancers have tests that can do so, except for a few in places such as the breasts, prostate and lungs.

A handful of companies have entered the space to detect more cancers. Among them is Grail, a Silicon Valley-based biotechnol­ogy start-up that has developed the Galleri test, one of the furthest along, biotechnol­ogy experts said.

The company’s test works off the basic principle of finding DNA that tumor cells release into the bloodstrea­m as they die and replicate. The Galleri test spots markers on DNA shed by tumor cells and feeds that data into a machine-learning algorithm that can detect whether cancer is present and in which organ, said Josh Ofman, Grail’s president.

The company says its test can identify more than 50 cancers early. The tests are not approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, though they are actively seeking it, Ofman added. Most insurances don’t cover the test, but people can purchase it for a hefty $949 if they have a prescripti­on.

Grail conducted an initial study in which it screened more than 6,600 people over age 50 for cancer with its test. It caught cancer in 35 people, and in 71 percent of those cases the cancers were not ones for which there is routine screening. Fiftysix healthy blood samples were incorrectl­y identified as cancerous.

The Biden administra­tion’s initiative, run by the National Cancer Institute, plans to examine how effective blood tests are in identifyin­g cancer early. It will look to enroll 24,000 patients ages 45 to 70 starting in 2024 for a four-year pilot study. This will lay the groundwork for a larger trial that aims to enroll 225,000 people, the White House said.

Which tests will be in the study have not been finalized, Ofman said, adding that Grail would be happy to collaborat­e.

Salil Garg, a clinical investigat­or at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrativ­e Cancer Research, said if tests can be perfected, they would become valuable as regular screening tools for patients.

A positive result doesn’t necessaril­y mean there’s cancer present or there’s a mass that will turn into cancer, he added. Pinpointin­g where the cancer comes from is difficult.

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