Abnormal Proteins In Saliva Identify Breast Cancer, Benign Tumor Cells, Study Finds
Wonderful news! Where do I sign up? This means freedom for all women from the degrading torture test called a “mammogram” that was surely invented by Machiavelli. Not that mammograms have really ever been worth the risks with their high false positive AND false negative rates.
Protein markers in saliva can distinguish women with breast cancer from those with benign tumors and those with healthy cells, according to a study published online in the journal Cancer Investigation, the Houston Chronicle reports. According to the Houston Chronicle, the findings potentially could enable dentists and physicians to detect breast cancer during routine office visits.
For the study, Charles Streckfus, professor of diagnostic sciences at the University of Texas Health Science Center, and colleagues analyzed saliva samples from 30 women — 10 with benign tumors, 10 with malignant tumors and 10 without tumors. The researchers found 49 proteins that differentiated between the women with tumors and those without. In previous research, Streckfus was able to identify 85% of malignancies with one differing breast cancer protein, a rate he estimates could approach 95% with if additional proteins are analyzed. (Ackerman, Houston Chronicle, 1/10). According to Streckfus, the researchers with additional analysis were able to distinguish between benign and malignant tumors. He added that the extra analysis could help eliminate “false positive results” and allow doctors to determine the next treatment options for women with breast cancer (Taylor, Globe and Mail, 1/11).
Streckfus said he hopes to seek federal approval of a test within five years but acknowledged further research must be conducted, such as validating the study results in hundreds of saliva samples he has collected. He said that he hopes to launch a large, multicenter trial in about two years at the UT M.D. Anderson Cancer Center and the UT Dental Branch. According to the Chronicle, the test will be conducted on a gold-plated chip or lab dish. A laser will then be used to distinguish protein markers in the saliva applied to the chip. According to Streckfus, such a test would be used in conjunction with other tools, including mammograms. There are no blood tests for detecting breast cancer.
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“This will be a noninvasive, quick means of detection,” Streckfus said, adding, “With it, dentists will be able to catch cancers before a woman can feel a lump.” Streckfus noted that the test could be useful for breast cancer survivors who need to be monitored regularly and also in developing countries were mammography centers are lacking. William Dubinsky — a biochemist at UT Medical School, who also worked on the study — said saliva offers tremendous advantages over blood beyond the fact that it is easier to obtain.
Leonard Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for American Cancer Society, said the research is clearly in the preliminary stages but added that a saliva test would be a “terrific advance” (Houston Chronicle, 1/10). Damien Walmsley, scientific adviser at the British Dental Association, said, “The mouth itself is a good indicator of an individual’s overall health,” adding, “In the case of breast cancer, saliva analysis has been used to monitor patient response to chemotherapy or surgical treatment of the disease” (Moss, Scotsman, 1/11).
Henry Scowcroft of the Cancer Research UK said that the finding “is one of many early ‘proof-of-principle’ results that are published every year” but that the “research only looked at samples from a very small number of people.” He added that the “technique might not prove reliable when more people are studied, and there’s no data on how effective it might be in practice. So there’s a lot more work to be done to find out if this method could ever be used routinely” (BBC News, 1/10).
An abstract of the study is available online.
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