Japanese biotech firm uses tiny worms in test for pancreatic cancer
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[November 30, 2022]
By Rocky Swift
TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japanese biotech firm says it has developed the
world's first early screening test for pancreatic cancer, using the
powerful noses of tiny worms.
Hirotsu Bio Science this month launched its N-NOSE plus Pancreas test,
marketing directly to consumers in Japan and with aims to bring the test
to the United States by 2023.
Users send a urine sample through a special mail pouch to a lab, where
it is put in a petri dish with a species of nematodes. The creatures,
known scientifically as C. elegans, have olfactory senses much more
powerful than dogs, the company says, and they follow their nose toward
cancer cells.
That makes the 1-milimetre long animals a potent diagnostic tool, says
company founder and chief executive Takaaki Hirotsu, who has been
researching them for 28 years.
"What's very important with early detection of cancer and these kinds of
diseases is being able to sense very trace amounts," Hirotsu told
Reuters. "And when it comes to that, I think that machines don't stand a
chance against the capabilities that living organisms have."
Hirotsu Bio launched its first N-NOSE consumer test in January 2020
which claimed the ability to tell if users were at high risk of cancer
or not. About 250,000 people have taken the original test, with about
5%-6% getting high-risk readings.
In the latest version, the company tweaked the genetic code of the
nematodes so that they would swim away from pancreatic cancer samples.
Hirotsu Bio started with pancreatic cancer due to its difficulty in
diagnosis and speed of progression.
In the coming years, the company expects to roll out targeted tests for
liver cancer, as well as cervical and breast cancers.
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Hirotsu Bio Science Chief Technical
Officer Eric Di Luccio examines nematodes in a petri dish during a
photo opportunity at the company's lab in Fujisawa, Kanagawa
Prefecture, Japan November 28, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
The pancreas test kit costs up to
70,000 yen ($505), comparatively expensive for a diagnostic test in
Japan, which has a nationalised health care system and fixed prices
for drugs and procedures.
The price tag, along with a TV ads using caricatures of the worms
and the pancreas, are part of the process of building a brand,
Hirotsu said, adding that the price may come down as the company
scales up.
Some doctors have criticised this direct approach to consumers and
doubted the medical usefulness of the results.
Masahiro Kami, the head of the Medical Governance Research Institute
think tank in Tokyo, said that false positives could greatly
outnumber actual cases of pancreatic cancer, making the results "not
usable".
The company counters that the accuracy of N-NOSE stands up well
against other diagnostic tests and are intended as early screening
tools that can guide patients to further testing and treatment
sooner.
Although he's been studying nematodes for decades and they form the
basis of his company, Hirotsu says he doesn't have any particular
affinity for the creatures.
"I feel like I have to give the answer that I love nematodes and I
find them cute, but that's not the case at all," he said. Really, I
just think of them as research materials and nothing more."
($1 = 138.6700 yen)
(Reporting by Rocky Swift; Editing by Michael Perry)
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