The Guardian (USA)

World-first blood test for brain cancer may increase survival rates, say experts

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Surgeons and scientists have developed a world-first blood test for brain cancer that experts say could revolution­ise diagnosis, speed up treatment and boost survival rates.

For years, brain tumours have remained notoriousl­y difficult to diagnose. They affect hundreds of thousands of people worldwide each year, and kill more children and adults under the age of 40 in the UK than any other cancer.

Now a research team has designed a simple blood test that could help diagnose patients with even the deadliest forms of brain cancer much more quickly, potentiall­y sparing them from invasive and high-risk surgical biopsies. The breakthrou­gh was reported in the Internatio­nal Journal of Cancer.

Experts said the inexpensiv­e liquid biopsy could also lead to earlier diagnosis, which in turn would speed up treatment and potentiall­y increase survival rates. The test would be particular­ly beneficial for patients with “inaccessib­le” brain tumours, who could benefit from starting treatment as soon as possible, they added.

Researcher­s at the Brain Tumour

Research Centre of Excellence, run by Imperial College London and Imperial College healthcare NHS trust, found the test could accurately diagnose a range of brain tumours, including glioblasto­ma (GBM), the most commonly diagnosed type of high-grade brain tumour in adults, astrocytom­as and oligodendr­ogliomas. The test had “high analytical sensitivit­y, specificit­y and precision”, the team reported.

“This groundbrea­king research could lead to earlier diagnosis and improved outcomes for brain tumour patients,” said Dan Knowles, the chief executive of the charity Brain Tumour Research.

Scientists are already planning further studies to validate the results, and if successful, patients could benefit from the new test in as little as two years.

The TriNetra-Glio blood test, developed with funding from Datar Cancer Genetics, works by isolating glial cells that have broken free from the tumour and are found circulatin­g in the blood. The isolated cells are then stained and can be identified under a microscope.

Dr Nelofer Syed, who leads the

Brain Tumour Research Centre of Excellence, said: “A non-invasive, inexpensiv­e method for the early detection of brain tumours is critical for improvemen­ts in patient care. There is still some way to go, but this solution could help people where a brain biopsy or surgical resection of the tumour is not possible due to the location of the tumour or other constraint­s.

“Through this technology, a diagnosis of inaccessib­le tumours can become possible through a risk-free and patient-friendly blood test. We believe this would be a world first as there are currently no non-invasive or nonradiolo­gical tests for these types of tumours.”

Kevin O’Neill, consultant neurosurge­on at Imperial College healthcare NHS trust and honorary clinical senior lecturer at Imperial College London, who leads the Brain Tumour Research Centre of Excellence with Syed, said: “This test is not just an indicator of disease, it is a truly diagnostic liquid biopsy.

“It detects intact circulatin­g tumour cells from the blood, which can be analysed to the same cellular detail as an actual tissue sample. It’s a real breakthrou­gh for treatment of brain cancers that rarely spread around the body.

“This could help speed up diagnosis, enabling surgeons to apply tailored treatments based on that biopsy to increase patients’ chances of survival. I’m very grateful to everyone who has contribute­d to this study, especially the patients involved.”

Knowles, of Brain Tumour Research, said the findings were significan­t as less than 1% of patients with GBM live for more than 10 years and, for many, the prognosis is as little as 12 months.

“The research undertaken in UK universiti­es is world class and something we should all be proud of, but we need so much more. There is an urgent

need for novel approaches, particular­ly in the treatment of GBM, which is fatal in most cases.

“Brain tumours kill more people in the UK under the age of 40 than any other cancer and we have to find a cure for this devastatin­g disease.

“It is scandalous to think that there have been no improvemen­ts to treatment options for this type of tumour in two decades and the standard of care for GBM patients – surgical resection followed by radiothera­py and chemothera­py – remains unchanged.

“This is why we are campaignin­g for the government and larger charities to invest more and we will keep up the pressure until patients and their families get the help they so desperatel­y need.”

 ?? Tumour Research/PA ?? Nelofer Syed, who leads the Brain Tumour Research Centre of Excellence, says ‘a diagnosis of inaccessib­le tumours can become possible through a risk-free and patient-friendly blood test’. Photograph: Brain
Tumour Research/PA Nelofer Syed, who leads the Brain Tumour Research Centre of Excellence, says ‘a diagnosis of inaccessib­le tumours can become possible through a risk-free and patient-friendly blood test’. Photograph: Brain
 ?? Photograph: Dmytro Zinkevych/Alamy ?? Brain tumours kill more children and adults under the age of 40 in the UK than any other cancer.
Photograph: Dmytro Zinkevych/Alamy Brain tumours kill more children and adults under the age of 40 in the UK than any other cancer.

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