Sunday, May 24, 2026
ADVT 
Health

India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection

IANS, 24 Feb, 2015 12:59 PM
    Researchers in the US, led by an India-born physician scientist, have said they have developed a new blood test that has the potential to detect cancers in their earliest stages.
     
    In a proof-of-principle study, researchers from Stanford University, with Sanjiv Gambhir as the lead author, administered a drug called DNA minicircles to mice and found mice with tumours produced a substance that tumour-free mice did not make and was easily detected 48 hours later in the blood.
     
    The technique "represents an alternative paradigm for improved cancer detection", said the paper published in the US journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Monday. 
     
    "If proven safe and effective, (it) eventually may have potential as a powerful cancer-screening tool for the general population," Xinhua news agency quoted the paper as stating.
     
    The hunt for cancer "biomarkers" in the blood, or substances that indicate a probable tumour, is nothing new, but various tumour types naturally secrete characteristic substances with each requiring its own separate test, said Gambhir, chair of radiology and director of the Canary Center at Stanford for Cancer Early Detection.
     
    Complicating matters, these substances are also quite often made in healthy tissues, so a positive test result did not absolutely mean a person actually has cancer. In addition, a tumour, especially a small one, simply may not secrete enough of the trademark substance to be detectable.
     
    Gambhir's team found a way to force any of numerous tumour types to produce a biomarker whose presence in the blood of mice unambiguously signifies cancer, because none of the rodents' tissues would normally be making it.
     
    "This biomarker is a protein called secreted embryonic alkaline phosphatase (SEAP)," they said in a statement. "SEAP is naturally produced in human embryos as they form and develop, but it's not present in adults."
     
    To trick mice's cancer cells into making SEAP and squirting it into the bloodstream, Gambhir and his colleagues used a DNA minicircle, which is a tiny, artificial, single-stranded DNA ring about 4,000 nucleotides in circumference, or roughly one-millionth as long as the DNA strand that would result from stretching all 23 chromosomes of the human genome end to end.
     
    They engineered the DNA minicircle so that it can be activated by a particular promoter, a short DNA sequence that only works in cancer cells. When activated, a reporter gene on the minicircle will produce the protein called SEAP, which can be detected in the bloodstream.
     
    Then the researchers injected the minicircles intravenously into mice bearing human melanoma metastases and tumor-free mice and measured SEAP levels in the animals' blood one, three, seven, 11 and 14 days later.
     
    Within 48 hours, SEAP was present in the blood of mice with tumours, but not in that of the tumour-free animals. That signal began declining in strength as early as 72 hours post-injection, fading to insignificance within the next two weeks or so.
     
    "Its maximum strength varied with the total tumour volume in a mouse's lungs, suggesting that the test may be sensitive not only to the presence of cancer but also to its extent," they said.
     
    Although the minicircles were injected intravenously to the mice in this study, it should eventually prove possible to deliver them orally via a pill, Gambhir, born in Ambala, India, and a recipient of numerous awards and honours, said. 
     
    "We haven't got it down to a pill yet, but the oral delivery part of this is likely a solvable problem -- only a few years off, not five or 10 years off," he said, noting it would take much more time than that to prove that the approach is safe to use in humans.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients
    When a medical emergency strikes, instinct tells us to go to the nearest hospital quickly.

    Busiest hospital best for emergency patients

    Common cholesterol drug linked to death risk

    Common cholesterol drug linked to death risk
    Niacin, a common cholesterol drug for 50 years, should no longer be prescribed owing to potential increased risk of death, dangerous side effects and no benefit in reducing heart attacks and strokes, researchers said.

    Common cholesterol drug linked to death risk

    Eat leafy vegetables to reset biological clock

    Eat leafy vegetables to reset biological clock
    Lipoic acid, found at higher levels in organ meats and leafy vegetables such as spinach and broccoli, may help reset and synchronise circadian rhythms or the "biological clock" found in most life forms, says a study.

    Eat leafy vegetables to reset biological clock

    Divorce can lead to high blood pressure

    Divorce can lead to high blood pressure
    Just had a divorce and facing persistent sleep problems? Check your blood pressure as you may be at the risk of potentially harmful increase in blood pressure, says a study.

    Divorce can lead to high blood pressure

    True happiness lies in your DNA

    True happiness lies in your DNA
    Looking for eternal happiness? Try to match the DNA of Danish people.

    True happiness lies in your DNA

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study
    The use of cholesterol-lowering statins may help prolong the lives of people with diabetic cardiovascular disease, says a new research.

    Statins may increase life of diabetics: Study