Guest guest Posted May 10, 2005 Report Share Posted May 10, 2005 Hi all, We just received this e-mail from a young friend who is an M.D. at Yale. My mother, her sister and her sister's daughter all had ovarian cancer, so I am interested! Sue , Upstate New York ====================== I highly recommend you ask your OB/GYN for this panel of 4 blood tests at your next visit. It is the first assay to accurately detect early ovarian cancer through a blood test--a real breakthrough, developed here at Yale OB/GYN dept. I would be surprised if it doesn't become standard of care immediately. Forward to any of your female friends/family. http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=healthNews & storyID=8439562 Blood test accurately detects early ovarian cancer Tue May 10, 2005 07:27 AM ET NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - US researchers may have come up with a test that reliably detects ovarian cancer in its early stages, when it is more easily curable. Ovarian cancer is a 'silent' disease early on, and is often not diagnosed until it is advanced and difficult to remedy. The newly reported test measures levels of four protein markers in blood -- leptin, prolactin, osteopontin, and insulin-like growth factor-II -- according to a report in the Early Edition of the research journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The developers of the test, Dr. Gil Mor from Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues, examined its ability to distinguish between 106 disease-free subjects and 100 ovarian cancer patients, including 24 diagnosed with early-stage disease. Prolactin and osteopontin levels were significantly elevated in women with early ovarian cancer, the researchers report, whereas leptin and insulin-like growth factor-II levels were significantly reduced. These four proteins were able, when used together, to completely discriminate between the women with cancer and those without, the report indicates. " The extent to which leptin, osteopontin, prolactin, and insulin-like growth factor-II can serve as potential biomarkers of cancers other than early ovarian cancer must be investigated rigorously, " the researchers point out. " Nevertheless, " they conclude, " the data presented here support the existence of a highly accurate and distinct multiplex proteomic set that can accurately distinguish between normal and early ovarian cancer patients, including stage I and II. " SOURCE: PNAS Early Edition, May 9, 2005. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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