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"The breast makes its own estrogen," explained Toronto gynecology specialist Dr. Noha Mousa. "We have solid evidence that measuring estrogen inside the breast is important. No. 1 is to see if these medications are working."
The Toronto team put the multi-step lab processing onto the surface of the new chip. Electrical currents move droplets around the chip, allowing solvents and other chemicals to dissolve a dried tissue sample and remove other biological substances until just droplets of estrogen are left. The team took small breast tissue samples -- the amount pulled from a needle instead of an open biopsy -- plus blood samples from two breast cancer patients, and reported that the chip allowed accurate estrogen measurement.
Next up: Mousa will use the technique to measure estrogen levels in a soon-to-start study of more than 200 Canadian women at high risk of getting breast cancer, who are testing whether taking those estrogen-blocking aromatase inhibitors for a year lowers their risk.
But the technology is applicable to more than breast cancer. Mousa points to infertile women who have large amounts of blood drawn several times a month to see if treatment is sparking ovulation, saying she's also testing whether the chip might substitute pinpricks of blood.
[Associated
Press;
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