More biology articles in the 'Microarray' category

Duke University Medical Center scientists have developed the first-ever genomic test to predict which patients with early-stage lung cancer will need chemotherapy to live and which patients can avoid the toxic regimen of drugs.

The test has the potential to save thousands of lives each year by recommending chemotherapy for patients who are currently advised against it, said the test's developers at Duke's Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy.

The test's promising results have initiated a landmark multi-center clinical trial, to be led by Duke investigators next year. Patients with early-stage non-small cell lung cancer, the most common and fatal form of cancer, will receive the genomic test and its results will determine their treatment.

The new test, called the Lung Metagene Predictor, scans thousands of genes to identify patterns of gene activity in individual tumors that indicate a patient is likely to suffer a recurrence of disease. Recurrent tumors are typically fatal, so identifying at-risk patients is critical to properly treating them, said the Duke researchers.

"Using the unique genomic signatures from each tumor, our new test predicted with up to 90 percent accuracy which early-stage lung cancer patients would suffer a recurrence of their cancer and which patients would not," said Anil Potti, M.D., an assistant professor of medicine and lead author of the study. "We now have a tool that can be used to move these high-risk patients from the 'no chemotherapy' group into the aggressive treatment group."

The researchers will publish their findings in the Aug. 10, 2006, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

The genomic test can theoretically apply to any cancer, but the Duke team focused its effort on lung cancer because the survival rate is just 15 percent. Lung cancer now kills more Americans each year than breast, prostate and colorectal cancers combined. But toxic chemotherapy drugs are prescribed only to patients with relatively large and aggressive tumors.

Early-stage patients – those with small, stationary tumors – are considered at low risk of recurrence. Hence, they only receive surgery but not chemotherapy. The dilemma, said Potti, is that a third or more of early-stage patients who appear to be at low risk will experience a recurrent tumor.

"Until now, there simply has been no way to identify the 30 percent to 40 percent of early-stage lung cancer patients who would experience a recurrence," Potti said. "Now, with our test, we can say with confidence that we can identify this group of patients so they can be treated accordingly."

The upcoming trial is the first to use a genomic test to select treatment options for individual lung cancer patients, said David Harpole, M.D., a professor of thoracic surgery at Duke and principal investigator of the upcoming clinical trial. The trial, to begin within six months, will enroll more than 1,000 patients at multiple centers in the United States and Canada.

"If we can use the test to increase patient survival by even 5 percent, we would save 10,000 lives a year," Harpole said.

The Duke researchers developed the test by analyzing the activity of genes from early-stage lung cancer patients whose disease outcomes were known. The Duke scientists then validated the genomic test in 129 patients by comparing the test's predictions with the patient's actual outcomes. The test predicted their risk of recurrence with 90 percent accuracy, the study showed.

If proven to be effective in the clinical trial, the test will replace the current method of assessing risk, which is imprecise and provides only a broad estimate of a patient's risk, said Joseph Nevins, Ph.D., a professor of molecular genetics at Duke and senior author of the study being reported.

Physicians now assign each patient to a clinical "stage" based on the size of the patient's tumor, whether it has invaded lymph nodes and whether it has spread to other organs. They use this staging method to prescribe the best treatment options. But staging parameters are general, at best, and do not accurately define who should receive chemotherapy, Nevins said.

"Instead of placing all patients with small tumors in the same early-stage category, as physicians currently would do, we can now assess their risk based on the tumor's genomic profile," Nevins said. "The current system of 'staging' lung cancer tumors will eventually become obsolete."

To employ the test, physicians take a sample of the tumor as it is removed during surgery. They extract its "messenger RNA," which represents the activity of thousands of genes in the tumor. Messenger RNA translates a gene's DNA code into proteins that run the cell's activities. Hence, it is a barometer of a gene's activity level inside the cell.

Scientists label the messenger RNA with fluorescent tags. The fluorescent RNA is then placed on a tiny glass slide, called a gene chip. There, it binds to its complementary DNA sequence on the gene chip.

When scanned with special light, the fluorescent RNA emits a telltale luminescence that demonstrates how much RNA is present on the chip – and thus which genes are most active in a given tumor. The physicians then use a rigorous statistical analysis to assess the relative risk of large grouping of genes, called metagenes, which have similar characteristics.

The test generates a risk "number" for each patient. If their risk exceeds 50 percent, the patient is advised to get chemotherapy.

"This new genomic test is a clear example of personalized medicine, where we use the unique molecular characteristics of each patient's tumor to guide treatment decisions," said Geoffrey Ginsburg, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of medicine and co-author of the study.

Eventually, physicians will use genomic tests not only to predict patient outcomes, but also to select the individual drugs that will best match a tumor's molecular makeup, Ginsburg said.

Source : Duke University Medical Center

gdpawel writes:

Lung Metagene Predictor is a "genetic" analysis that predicts which lung cancer patient will have a greater chance of recurrence (not predict chemo response) after surgery. It can tell physicians which early-stage lung cancer patients will benefit from chemotherapy and which ones do not need to be unnecessarily exposed to toxic chemo cocktails.

The test scans thousands of genes to identify patterns of gene activity in individual tumors that indicate a patient is likely to suffer a recurrence of disease.

There has been a campaign by some thoracic surgeons to encourage other thoracic surgeons to obtain and analyze fresh tissues for cellular and molecular testing, to look at the results of these assays very carefully in the context of other known prognostic factors and choose agents based on their profiles.

On can utilize "half the science" cell proliferation assays or one can utilize "whole science" cell-death assays. Using the science is better than not using the science. Just so patients realize that cell proliferation cannot accurately predict for drug "sensitivity," just drug "resistance." Assays based on cell-death occur in the entire population of tumor cells, as opposed to only in a small fraction of the tumor cells occurring in cell proliferation assays.

Cell proliferation assays do not test for drug combinations. Cell-death assays do test for combinations. Some of them test to see when it is beneficial to combine conventional anti-cancer drugs with the new "targeted" drugs, and can actually test for anti-angiogenesis-related drugs.

Chemotherapy Resistance Testing in Lung Cancer Patients

A study led by a lung cancer surgeon at Jefferson Medical College suggests that oncologists should take more advantage of laboratory tests that have the potential to help determine a lung cancer patient's resistance to chemotherapy drugs. All too often, patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are given standard chemotherapy drugs after surgery in a "hit or miss" fashion, without doctors knowing which drugs might have better chances than others to help treat the tumor. Steps should be taken to validate such resistance tests in clinical trials.

Reporting recently in the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Thomas d'Amato, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of surgery at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, and his colleagues analyzed data on 4,571 non-small cell lung cancer tumors' resistance to four pairs of chemotherapy agents, each of which included a standard platinum-based drug: carboplatin and paclitaxel (taxol), cisplatin and navelbine, cisplatin and docetaxel and cisplatin and gemcitabine.

Using the "extreme drug resistance" test to monitor cancer resistance in a test tube, they found resistance in 30 percent of tumors to carboplatin-paclitaxel, 24 percent to cisplatin-navelbine, 42 percent to cisplatin-gemcitabine and 27 percent to cisplatin-docetaxel.

"Clinical unresponsiveness for most patients with lung cancer to standard chemotherapy may be explained and measured accurately with an assay that measures a specific patient's tumor resistance to a given cytotoxic drug," Dr. d'Amato says. "This assay has the potential to guide therapy and can be used to tailor a patient's therapy by avoiding chemotherapeutic agents that will likely be ineffective."

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death around the world. According to the American Cancer Society, an estimated 213,380 new cases of lung cancer (both small cell and non-small cell) will occur this year in the United States. About 160,390 people will die of this disease.

Chemoresistance testing isn't new. Dr. d'Amato says that it has been applied successfully in ovarian and recurrent ovarian cancer and has helped many oncologists rule out chemotherapy agents because of toxicity and a low probability of clinical response. While the prevalence of drug resistance to common chemotherapy drugs in non-small cell lung cancer is alarmingly high, he says, the assay's usefulness in tailoring appropriate therapies that help patients has yet to be proven.

"I believe the resistance assay is terribly underused," he says. "Having this assay available for a number of years, it is surprising that it has not been integrated into any clinical trials. In this age of targeted agents, it is time to avoid empiric therapy if possible, particularly in cancer. We don't cure many with lung cancer with chemotherapy."

Dr. d'Amato's group also used the resistance assay to attempt to find markers - specific genes - that may be associated with resistance to chemotherapy, based on patient tumor resistance and individual gene expression profiles.

"In this era of empiric therapy, particularly with novel agents that are expensive, molecular testing needs to be paired to these studies," he says. "Clinical trial data is needed proving an agent's usefulness before clinical oncologists will use it."

Literature Citation: d’Amato, Thomas A. Adjuvant Chemotherapy and the Role of Chemoresistance Testing for Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. Thorac Surg Clin 17 (2007) 287–299.

04/30/2007 04:27 pm

Login

Username
Password
Remember me
Not yet part of the community?

Register Now!

August 10, 2006 02:36 PMMicroarray



Search Bio News Net

Free Biology Newsletter


Biology News Net