Scientists discover powerful biomarker panel for the early detection of breast cancer
     December 15, 2010 by admin
In the war on cancer,  perhaps there is nothing more powerful in a physician’s arsenal than  early detection. Despite recent advances in early detection and  treatment, breast cancer remains a common and significant health problem  in the United States and worldwide. Approximately one in ten women will  get breast cancer in their lifetime and more than half of women with  late stage cancer (II and III) have no cure or effective therapeutic  available.
Using a new, powerful method for rapidly screening molecules  associated with disease, proteomics expert Joshua LaBaer and colleagues  from the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University have identified  a broad panel of 28 early predictors, or biomarkers, that may one day  aid in the early diagnosis of breast cancer.
“We do not have any available blood markers for breast cancer,” said  LaBaer, a Virginia G. Piper Chair in Personalized Medicine at ASU who  directs the Center for Personalized Diagnostics at the Biodesign  Institute. “Our hope is to combine a new type of blood test with  mammography screening to aid in the early detection of breast cancer.”
The findings represent the first demonstration of a custom protein  array technology deployed to find biomarkers in breast cancer patients  before they were clinically diagnosed for cancer. These biomarkers were  specific for breast cancer patients and not in healthy women or women  with a benign form of breast disease.
Their findings appear in the American Chemistry Society’s Journal of Proteome Research.
The LaBaer lab is involved in a quest for biomarkers that detect  early disease and distinguish benign breast disease from invasive  cancers to guide patient and doctor decisions. LaBaer is an expert in a  burgeoning field that strives to understand the global role of protein  function, called proteomics, that plays a powerful and relevant role in  the discovery of biomarkersA—unique molecular fingerprints of  disease—that is part of a large scale Biodesign Institute effort to  identify biosignatures that can provide early warning for those at risk  of major illnesses, including cancer and diabetes.
To develop new biomarkers for the early detection of breast cancer,  LaBaer’s team explored the intersection between cancer and our bodies’  primary defense mechanism against invaders, the immune system. Previous  studies have shown that proteins produced by cancers can trigger the  body to produce antibodies that are not found in healthy individuals.  These “autoantibodies” can be measured in the blood and used to betray  the presence of a hidden cancer.
The challenge faced by researchers is to determine which antibodies  among millions are specific for breast cancer. To accomplish this, the  team used a novel protein microarray technology, called Nucleic Acid  Protein Programmable Array (NAPPA), which was invented in LaBaer’s  Harvard Institute of Proteomics lab in 2004.
Protein microarrays display thousands of different candidate proteins  lined up in rows and columns on a single microscopic slide. A tiny drop  of blood was added to the microarray to look for proteins that are  recognized by the antibodies from the cancer patients but not from the  healthy women.
To narrow down the list of candidates, several successive screens  were performed that compared the immune responses in women with  early-stage breast cancer, those without cancer, and those with benign  abnormalities in their breasts. The patients and controls were also  matched for age and location.
Three phases of screens were performed, using increasingly rigorous  statistical selection standards that narrowed down the number of  potential biomarkers candidates from 5,000 to 761, which showed any  measurable difference between healthy and disease populations, to 119,  which showed a clear statistical difference. Finally, these were then  tested in a blinded study (where the researchers did not know which  samples were from breast cancer patients and which ones were from  controls) to find the final 28 biomarkers. The group not only looked at  how each individual biomarker fared during the screening, but also how  the entire panel of biomarkers worked together.
This was the first time the group has utilized NAPPA technology to  identify the parts of the immune response that are activated during  cancer, and the first serum biomarker panel developed for the  discrimination of benign breast disease from invasive breast cancers.  The group was pleased to confirm that many of the candidate biomarkers  have also been described as important in breast cancer tumor biology and  pathology.
“We were surprised at how hard it is to find biomarkers like this,”  said LaBaer. “The changes are subtle and rare, which is a real warning  shot to those investigating breast cancer research. The key is a team  approach that combines many different types of scientific expertise to  tackle the problem.”
In addition, LaBaer’s team has a broad interest in identifying  autoantibody biomarkers in patients that can be readily used for the  detection of many other cancers, such as ovarian cancer, prostate  cancer, and lung cancer as well as autoimmune diseases such as diabetes  and arthritis.
Samples used in these analyses were obtained from Fox Chase Cancer  Center (FCCC), the Duke University Medical Center (DUMC), and the  Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) with support from the National  Cancer Institute (NCI) Early Detection Research Network and the NCI  Breast SPORE program. LaBaer’s research is supported by grants from the  NCI branch of the National Institutes of Health and a $35 million  philanthropic gift from the Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust.
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