New technique offers fresh hope to lung cancer sufferers
March 22nd, 2011 - 4:33 pm ICT by ANILondon, Mar 22 (ANI): Scientists say that a simple new technique could help improve diagnosis and treatment options for lung cancer sufferers.
The new method involves counting the number of tumour cells in blood samples before and after chemotherapy, allowing doctors to establish how well patients are responding to treatment.
The test is said to represent an improvement on a current diagnosis test that is invasive and can only be carried out once.
Work on the tumour cells could also lead to future breakthroughs in understanding how the disease develops, researchers hope.
Until now, diagnosis has been made through a one-of procedure called a bronchoscopy in which tissue is taken from the airways with a needle.
In a new study, researchers detail how they studied the number of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in 101 lung cancer patients before and after one cycle of chemotherapy.
The team discovered that patients who had five or more CTCs were much less likely to survive the disease.
They believe that by counting CTCs, doctors will be able to monitor how well patients are responding to chemotherapy soon after starting it and so move them on to different treatments if the number of cells rises.
“Our research shows a new way to monitor how a patient’s lung cancer is responding to treatment and determine how aggressive it is. We now need to test our findings in more patients but, if our results are confirmed, there is now the potential to tailor treatments to individual patients and find new ways to treat the disease,” the Telegraph quoted Dr Fiona Blackhall, joint author and lung cancer clinician at The Christie cancer centre in Manchester, as saying.
The new study was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. (ANI)
- Circulating tumour cells in blood up death risk in early-stage breast cancer patients - Dec 11, 2010
- New drug hope for lung cancer sufferers - Mar 29, 2011
- Intestinal stem cells offer clues to colon cancer origin and relapse - Mar 18, 2011
- New way of treating lung cancer soon - Oct 11, 2011
- How ovarian cancer resists chemotherapy - Mar 03, 2011
- Drug used to treat asthma 'prevents spread of breast cancer' - Nov 04, 2010
- Oz scientists' defective gene discovery solves colorectal cancer mystery - Jan 17, 2011
- Magnets help fight prostate cancer - Nov 09, 2011
- New hope for cancer cure - Jul 08, 2011
- Gene makes ovarian cancer resistant to chemotherapy - Mar 03, 2011
- New guerrilla tactics could outwit cancer cells - Sep 05, 2012
- Gold nanoparticles may help detect tumor cells in blood - Feb 12, 2011
- Herpes virus can treat head and neck cancer - Aug 02, 2010
- Yuvraj will resume training in 10 weeks: Doctor (Lead) - Feb 06, 2012
- Targeted cancer drug more effective after first-line treatment - Feb 28, 2011
Tags: blood samples, bronchoscopy, cancer centre, cancer sufferers, chemotherapy, christie, clinician, ctcs, current diagnosis, doctors, fresh hope, joint author, lung cancer, lung cancer patients, new ways, oncology, study researchers, telegraph, treatment options, tumour cells