Blood test 'detects lung cancer'

Blood tests could help to detect early stages of lung cancer, researchers say
Blood tests could help to detect early stages of lung cancer, researchers say

Reddit

Stumble

 

Also In The News

Miller debut strike hands Rams first win

Derby climbed off the foot of the Premier League after a superb strike from new boy Kenny Miller handed Billy Davies' side all three points and a 1-0 win over Newcastle at Pride Park.

Scottish international Kenny Miller opened his account 37 minutes into his Derby career
 

Tuesday, 18, Sep 2007 07:15

A new blood test could help to identify lung cancer in its early stages, raising the chances of successfully treating the disease, scientists have found.

Currently scans and chest X-rays are performed on people with symptoms of lung disease but by the time symptoms are showing the disease is often well advanced.

Researchers have now found a protein in the blood which they believe to be linked to all stages of lung cancer but which rarely shows up in the blood of people without the disease.

As such a test for the protein could help physicians decide whether smokers or others at high risk of lung cancer should be referred for lung imaging.

"A positive test for this protein marker, followed by CT scanning, may help identify individuals with lung cancer at a stage in which treatment is more effective, possibly even curative," said research scientist Mark Semenuk from Panacea Pharmaceuticals at the American Association for Cancer Research conference.

In cancer cells the implicated protein, Human Aspartyl (Asparaginyl) beta-Hydroxylase (HAAH), resides on the surface of the cells in comparison to normal cells where it lives inside the cell body.

The researchers found that 99 per cent of 160 patients with all stages and various types of lung cancer had high levels of HAAH protein in their blood, but only nine per cent of 93 non-smokers without lung cancer had a positive HAAH blood test.

Panacea Pharmaceuticals argues that the results show a test could be both practical to use and cost effective.

Commenting on the finding, Dr Kat Arney, senior science information officer at Cancer Research UK, said: "As well as encouraging people to quit smoking to prevent lung cancer in the future, we urgently need to find ways to diagnose the disease earlier.

"Although larger studies will show if HAAH is suitable as a screening test for lung cancer, these early results are certainly interesting."

What do you think?

Name 

Location 

Email 

Comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

We're mobile!

Get news, sport and entertainment on your mobile. Text inthenews to 84010 or go to http://m.inthenews.co.uk. There is no charge for this service but the SMS will be charged at your standard operator rate.

Competitions

Win Wiis, Blu-ray players and LCD TVs with Chargy Bargy

Click here to play online rugby game Chargy Bargy and land the chance to win a Nintendo Wii, Blu-ray player or LCD TV, courtesy of O2.

Win Wiis, Blu-ray players and LCD TVs with Chargy Bargy

Win Shutter Island novels and posters!

To celebrate the release of Shutter Island we have teamed up with Paramount Pictures UK to give three winners a copy of original Dennis Lehane novel and a copy of the poster - click here for your chance to win.

Win Shutter Island novels and posters!