 |
|
|
 |
|
Gene Profiles Might Help Guide Lung Cancer Care
|
 |  |  |  | Related Healthscout Videos |  |
|
Page: << Prev | 1 | 2 | 3 But Dr. Arul Chinnaiyan, a cancer microarray expert at the University of Michigan who was not affiliated with this research, praised the study's design -- particularly its size, use of blinded samples, and multi-institutional format. He also applauded the team's ability to develop and identify gene signatures that work across the various testing sites.
"Many biomarkers as developed often don't hold up across institutions," he said. "Early on, studies are done in an unblended way, at one institution. Often, when another researcher does this, it doesn't validate. That is what is so impressive, that it held up at all these institutions. That points to the robustness of the signature they identified, that it probably will hold up in a clinical setting."
Kim agreed that the study's strength lay in its numbers.
Text Continues Below

"This is extremely important [work] because they brought everyone together, they have 442 samples for which they have very good gene expression data and clinical data," he said. "And the goal is to grow this so it can be used in a prospective study and hopefully, then, be integrated into our daily clinical practice."
According to Chinnaiyan, the new data suggest that a lung cancer prognosis, like that of breast cancer, could be predicted from gene expression data via a diagnostic test. Two clinical tests, Agendia's MammaPrint and Genomic Health's Oncotype DX, already use the expression of 70 or 21 genes, respectively, to predict which breast cancer patients are likely to suffer a recurrence of disease, and thus might benefit from more aggressive therapies.
The hope is that similar strategies might work for an even bigger killer, lung cancer.
"This is very analogous," Chinnaiyan said.
More information
For more on lung cancer, visit the American Lung Association.
Page: << Prev | 1 | 2 | 3
|
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 7/21/2008
|
 |

SOURCES: David Beer, Ph.D., professor, department of thoracic surgery, Cancer Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Edward Kim, M.D., assistant professor, medicine, department of thoracic/head and neck oncology, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston; Arul M. Chinnaiyan, M.D., Ph.D., director, Michigan Center for Translational Pathology, investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and S.P. Hicks Endowed Professor of Pathology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor; July 20, 2008, Nature Medicine, online
|