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RESEARCHERS FIND MOLECULAR MARKERS FLAGGING PRESENCE OF SMALL METASTASES BEFORE REACHING LIFE-THREATENING SIZE
19 June 2007 - American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
| Patients with melanoma of the eye are at risk for liver metastases, which are often not detected until they have turned into large, lethal tumors. Now researchers have found molecular markers, including changes in a particular chromosome, that flag the presence of small metastases before they reach life-threatening size. |
In a second important finding, the researchers showed that a common procedure, called fine needle biopsy, could be used to accurately detect these molecular signatures. “The results show that we can pinpoint these molecular markers in the small amount of RNA and DNA obtained from fine needle biopsy,” said principal investigator J. William Harbour, M.D., Associate Professor of Ophthalmology/Cell Biology/Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “This means that testing for the markers is clinically feasible and could be used routinely to identify patients with ocular melanoma who are at high risk for metastasis.” Results were presented at the first meeting on Molecular Diagnostics in Cancer Therapeutic Development, organized by the American Association for Cancer Research. In prior studies, Dr. Harbour and his colleagues found that a particular molecular signature, the pattern of expression, or activation, of a group of 3 to 10 genes, was an accurate predictor of metastasis. On the basis of this gene expression pattern, patients with ocular melanoma can now be divided into two groups: Those with a class 1 molecular signature have little risk of metastasis while those with a class 2 signature have a high risk. In this study, the St. Louis researchers first tested whether the minute quantities of RNA obtained from fine needle biopsies were adequate to detect the class 1 and class 2 signatures. The results were positive. The signatures obtained from the fine needle biopsies corresponded to signatures obtained through conventional biopsies and to those found in the earlier studies. Secondly, the researchers found that DNA from the fine needle biopsies included another biomarker: On chromosome 8, the loss of DNA in the p region correlated with time to metastasis. Among patients with 8p loss, the median time to metastasis was 25.8 months while for those without 8p loss, it was 37.4 months. The authors conclude that RNA- and DNA-based testing of fine needle aspirates is clinically feasible and accurately predicts metastatic risk and time to metastasis in ocular melanoma. The next step, Dr. Harbour said, is a larger, multicenter study in which cancer centers around the country will obtain fine needle aspirates from ocular melanoma patients and send them to Washington University for analysis. If this study confirms the usefulness of the procedure on a large scale, it could become routine practice. Patients at high risk for metastasis could then opt for further, preventive treatment, including clinical trials of new targeted agents and immunotherapies, Dr. Harbour said. “Because we can now identify high risk patients, we can design clinical trials specifically for this population,” he said. “And this could lead to more rapid development of new agents to prevent or slow down metastasis in ocular melanoma.”
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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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