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Topic Name: Developed simple bladder cancer test
Category: Biomedical
Research persons: Steve Goodison, an associate professor of surgery at the UF College of Medicine-Jacksonville.
Location: University of Florida, Shands Health Science Center,653 West 8th Street,Jacksonville FL 32209, United States
Details
University of Florida researchers have identified a set of c that
appear to signal the presence of bladder cancer, a discovery they hope will lead
to a simple, fast and noninvasive test that can detect the disease early.
Working with colleagues at the University of
Michigan, the scientists used advances in technology to isolate nearly 200
proteins from the urine of patients with and without bladder cancer. Several
appear promising as potential biomarkers, including one that studies conducted
elsewhere have already linked to liver and ovarian cancer. The findings,
available online, are scheduled to be published in the July 6 print edition of
the American
Chemical Society’s Journal of Proteome Research.
Developing a simple “dipstick” test that would better single out patients
whose symptoms are linked to cancer would enable those who simply have an
infection to avoid a battery of screenings that typically include cystoscopy, a
painful procedure that uses a small camera threaded through the urethra to image
the bladder’s interior. Such a test also could be used to detect cancer sooner,
possibly before its signs even surface.
“With any cancer, the earlier you find it the better because it’s not as
aggressive in its early stages, and of course it’s much easier to remove any
cancer anywhere in the body if you catch it while it’s relatively small,” said
Steve Goodison,
an associate professor of surgery at
the UF College of
Medicine-Jacksonville.
“What would really help in this disease would be a test you could use to
monitor these patients just by monitoring their urine,” he added. “If we could
develop this test to try to narrow down those who’ve got infections versus
something more serious, that would relieve the patient from pain and worry and
(cut health-care costs). The final aim would be to make a test cheap and
convenient enough that you can start to think of screening people who don’t have
any symptoms.”
Bladder cancer ranks among the five most common malignancies. The
American Cancer Society
estimates that in 2007 there will be about 67,160 new cases of bladder cancer
diagnosed in the United States. Four times more men than women contract the
disease, and smoking as well as exposure to industrial toxins increases the
risk. Although the five-year survival rate is about 94 percent when it is
detected early, bladder cancer is extremely difficult to cure because it tends
to recur.
“Imagine the bladder like a balloon, and the tumors grow into the interior of
the balloon,” Goodison said. “So the surgeons go in and want to be as least
disruptive as possible, so they nip these growths off from the inside, but
unfortunately once it’s happened it’s very likely going to happen again — once
you have bladder cancer you are at a high risk of recurrence for the rest of
your life, which makes monitoring it a real problem.”
As a result patients need to be closely monitored, with most undergoing
cystoscopy every few months in the first year after diagnosis and as frequently
as every six months thereafter. Meanwhile, the urine tests currently used to
detect recurrent bladder cancer miss 60 percent to 75 percent of all
malignancies, especially those that are low-grade or early stage.
“They haven’t proven to be accurate enough to make the urologists confident
to use them instead of doing manual inspection to date (using cystoscopy),”
Goodison said. “The trouble is, a lot of tests tend to look at only one
biomarker, and one biomarker is never really going to do it, you need to do a
panel. You need something like six biomarkers on a dipstick and if four of the
six come up then you have an accurate answer. Tests that look at one protein are
not going to do it because cancer is so different between individuals.”
In the current study, scientists used a technique to search for glycoproteins
— a subset of proteins naturally secreted into the urine from the bladder lining
— in urine samples from 10 individuals, five of whom had bladder cancer. Each
sample was small, on average about 30 milliliters, equivalent to a fluid ounce.
In contrast, previous urine protein profiles required large-volume samples.
Of the 186 proteins identified in the study, five were present only in the
patients with cancer. The findings also substantially add to the urinary
proteome database, which until now only contained 146 proteins. Additional
studies are planned to screen samples from a larger number of bladder cancer
patients with a variety of disease stages and grades, Goodison said.
“Even though our study involved a small number of patients so far, this was
really a proof of principle that we can use these new techniques to detect
proteins in the urine,” Goodison said. “Nobody could do that at this (degree of)
sensitivity until now.”
“The development of novel non-invasive methods for early detection of bladder
cancer is very exciting and represents a major step in (making) routine
screening of patients with urological disease feasible in the future,” said
Nicholas C. Popescu, chief of the molecular cytogenetics section at the
National Cancer Institute’s
Laboratory of
Experimental Carcinogenesis. “In addition, interactions among specific
proteins could lead to the development of effective therapy of bladder cancer, a
major cause of cancer death worldwide.”
Funded:
The study was funded through a grant from the
Florida Department of Health.
Goodison’s collaborators included UF
urologic surgeon
Dr. Charles Rosser, and
David Lubman, a
protein chemist at the University of Michigan.
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