Scientists in Taiwan have developed a simple, five-gene test aimed at showing
which lung cancer patients most need chemotherapy, as similar tests now do for
people with breast cancer and lymphoma.
 Scientists in Taiwan have developed a simple, five-gene test
aimed at showing which lung cancer patients most need chemotherapy, as
similar tests now do for people with breast cancer and lymphoma. The
experimental test needs to be validated in larger groups of patients, so
widespread use is perhaps a few years away. [AP]
 |
The experimental test needs to be
validated in larger groups of patients, so widespread use is perhaps a few years
away. However, it's already winning praise for its possible use in everyday
hospital settings instead of in limited situations by people with special
genetics training.
"This has the potential to be extremely helpful," said Dr. David Johnson, a
lung cancer expert at Vanderbilt University and former president of the American
Society of Clinical Oncology, the world's largest group of cancer specialists.
"It's further proof that understanding genetic signatures may be helpful in
how we treat patients. It may even allow us to avoid treating some patients," or
to pinpoint those who may not respond to current drugs and would be better off
trying an experimental therapy, he said.
Johnson had no role in the research, which was reported in Thursday's New
England Journal of Medicine. The Taiwan test is much simpler than a different
one involving dozens of genes described by Duke University researchers in the
same medical journal last August.
Lung cancer is the world's top cancer killer. About 175,000 new cases and
162,000 deaths from it occur in the United States each year.
Most tumors are diagnosed after they have already spread beyond the lung. For
the 20 percent or so of patients whose cancers are found in an early stage,
chemotherapy after surgery to remove the tumor can improve survival.
However, some of these early-stage patients have such a low risk of
recurrence that chemo gives them only slightly better odds. Others turn out to
have very aggressive tumors that prove fatal even though they are very small
when detected. Right now, there's no good way to tell these groups of patients
apart ¡ª size alone doesn't do it.
"The staging system pretty much needs to be trashed. It's imprecise, and it
tells us nothing close to what the genomic, genetic material tells us" in terms
of risk of recurrence and death, said Dr. Anil Potti, a scientist working on
Duke's gene signature test.
The test devised by Hsuan-Yu Chen and colleagues at Taiwan University aims to
give a better way to sort low- and high-risk patients.
The scientists analyzed 125 patients' tumor samples from patients with all
stages of lung cancer and found 16 genes that seemed to raise or lower the odds
of recurrence or death. Further analysis narrowed this down to five genes that
formed a signature of risk.
They tested this signature on half of the samples and found a strong
correlation to how well the patients actually fared. Median survival was 40
months for the lowest-risk group and 20 months for the highest-risk according to
the strength of activity of the five genes. The median time until relapse also
was significantly longer ¡ª 29 months versus 13 months ¡ª for the lowest-risk
group.
Results were validated in another set of 60 patients. Doctors also tested the
genes' prediction powers with information on 86 tumors that University of
Michigan researchers used to try to develop their own gene profiling test. The
Michigan researchers posted their information on the Internet, allowing the
Taiwan scientists to test results in a largely Caucasian population in addition
to their Asian one.
Researchers now must test more patients, assign chemotherapy based on the
resulting risk scores, and track survival, Dr. Roy Herbst of the University of
Texas' M.D. Anderson Cancer Center writes in an editorial accompanying the study
in the medical journal.
"In breast cancer now, patients are being selected for chemotherapy based on
studies like this," he noted. "We have to move to the next step" with lung
cancer, he said.
The study was paid for by the National Science Council of the Republic of
China and Advpharma, a Taiwan company, and one of the study authors is an
employee.