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COLORECTAL CARCINOMAS, NEW BIOMARKER FOR SURVIVAL PREDICTION REVEALED
15 June 2007 - American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
| According to a study at Yale University School of Medicine, levels of a protein called thymidylate synthase within two separate compartments of a tumor cell, the nucleus and the cytoplasm, may be critical markers predicting survival in colorectal cancer. |
The study revealed two different and independent predictors of survival in colorectal cancer. One was TS levels in the nucleus, the higher the levels, the lower the survival time; and one was the ratio of TS levels in the nucleus to levels in the cytoplasm, the higher the ratio, the lower the survival time. “TS levels have been known as a marker for decreased survival and response to therapy, but this is the first study to show that the relationship between nuclear and cytoplasmic levels of TS can predict survival,” said first author Mark D. Gustavson, Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in Yale’s Department of Pathology. Results were presented at the first meeting on Molecular Diagnostics in Cancer Therapeutic Development, organized by the American Association for Cancer Research. To determine subcellular TS levels, Gustavson and his colleagues used AQUA, a system that combines fluorescence-based imaging with automated microscopy and high-throughput tissue microarray technologies. Developed at Yale and licensed to HistoRx, AQUA can measure protein concentrations within specific cells and cellular compartments in a highly reproducible and unbiased manner, Gustavson said. Working with tissue samples from 518 colorectal cancer patients diagnosed between 1970 and 1981, the researchers found that just 51 percent of patients with high TS levels in the nucleus survived for five years compared to 71 percent of those with lower levels. The difference was highly statistically significant. TS levels in the cytoplasm were also higher in patients with lower survival times, though they were not as strong a predictor of survival as TS levels in the nucleus. The researchers next looked at the ratio between TS levels in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm and discovered that a high ratio predicted decreased survival. Moreover, the cytoplasmic-to-nuclear ratio appeared to be an independent marker, not correlated with high nuclear levels. Among patients with a high ratio, more than half (55 percent) did not have high nuclear levels. “The ratio identifies a group of patients with worse prognosis that would otherwise be missed,” Gustavson said. After taking into account other predictors of survival, including stage, age at diagnosis, gender, and race, both nuclear TS levels and the cytoplasm-to-nucleus ratio emerged as independent predictors of survival. “This is a new potential biomarker for predicting survival in patients with colorectal cancer,” said Gustavson. Up to now, standard immunohistochemistry has been used to measure only absolute levels of TS. However, this study shows that TS expression levels within different subcellular compartments and their relationships should also be considered, he said. The researchers also note that the markers may help in predicting response to therapy with 5-FU, one of the standard chemotherapy drugs used in colorectal cancer, since TS levels have been shown to be critical in modulating response to the drug. Currently a retrospective study is examining whether these two biomarkers can predict response to 5-FU.
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About: American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
The American Association for Cancer Research is a professional society of more than 24,000 laboratory and clinical scientists engaged in basic, translational, and clinical cancer research in the United States and more than 60 other countries. Founded in 1907, the AACR has as its mission to accelerate the prevention and cure of cancer through research, education, communication, collaboration and advocacy. Among the means to that end, the association publishes five major peer-reviewed scientific journals: Cancer Research – the most frequently cited cancer journal in the world – as well as Clinical Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer Therapeutics; Molecular Cancer Research; and Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. The AACR convenes an Annual Meeting attended by more than 15,000 scientists from around the world who share new and significant discoveries in the cancer field. Specialty meetings throughout the year focus on all the important areas of basic, translational and clinical cancer research.
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