Gene activity in the nose
may signal lung cancer
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[March 08, 2017] By
Will Boggs MD
(Reuters Health) - Genetic changes in the
cells lining the inside of the nose might someday help doctors diagnose
lung cancer, a recent study suggests.
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“The idea that you don't have to sample the disease tissue but can
diagnose presence of disease using relatively accessible cells that
are far from the tumor . . . is a paradigm that can impact many
cancers,” Dr. Avrum Spira from Boston University School of Medicine,
a member of the study team, told Reuters Health by email.
The layer of cells that covers the surfaces of the body and lines
the cavities is known as the epithelium. Researchers found that
distinctive changes in gene activity in the nasal epithelium of lung
cancer patients closely parallel the changes seen in lung epithelium
and can distinguish between benign lung disease and cancer.
"I think the most interesting finding was the genomic changes in the
nasal epithelium of lung cancer patients mirror so closely those
found in the lower airway,” Spira said.
The researchers thought the nose would be “a reasonable surrogate
for the ‘field of injury’ in the bronchial airway,” he added, but
the surprisingly strong concordance between the nose and lower
airway gave them the encouragement to develop a nasal biomarker for
lung cancer detection.
“Pulmonary nodules represent a growing diagnostic dilemma in the
U.S. as we have started to screen for lung cancer,” Spira said. “A
nasal swab that is highly sensitive for lung cancer in this setting
would enable physicians to avoid unnecessary invasive biopsies in
nodule patients who are unlikely to have lung cancer.”
Past research has found that gene expression profiles from normal
bronchial epithelial cells can distinguish smokers and former
smokers with lung cancer from individuals with benign lung disease,
and that nasal and bronchial epithelium respond similarly to tobacco
smoke.
Spira’s team sought to determine whether cancer-associated gene
expression in the nasal epithelium might be useful for detecting
lung cancer in current and former smokers.
They identified 535 genes that had different activity patterns in
the nasal epithelium of patients with lung cancer versus those with
benign disease.
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Cancer-associated gene changes correlated significantly between
nasal epithelium and bronchial epithelium samples, and the genes
that were more active in nasal epithelium of patients with lung
cancer were among the genes whose activity was most increased in
bronchial epithelium of patients with cancer.
When researchers compared models doctors might use to determine the
likelihood of lung cancer, nasal gene activity was more accurate
than clinical risk factors alone for diagnosing lung cancer,
according to the Journal of the National Cancer Institute report.
The combination of clinical factors and gene activity score
accurately predicted cancer 91 percent of the time, compared to 79
percent for the model based on risk factors. The combined model also
had 85 percent accuracy differentiating lung cancer from benign
disease, compared to 73 percent.
“One of the big-picture messages for physicians is that molecular
tests like this one are emerging as part of precision medicine
approaches for early cancer detection,” Spira said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2mdEWcl Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, online February 27, 2017.
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