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Sputum Test May Predict Lung Cancer.


By zeroing in on aberrations in two cancer-fighting genes, researchers have found a marker of cancer risk that could help doctors screen people for signs of lung cancer lung cancer, cancer that originates in the tissues of the lungs. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States in both men and women. Like other cancers, lung cancer occurs after repeated insults to the genetic material of the cell.  early enough for treatment to be effective.

Lung cancer will kill roughly 159,000 people in the United States this year, making it the deadliest malignancy. About 85 percent of patients are diagnosed too late for surgery, and they generally survive only 6 to 15 months. But when physicians catch the disease while it's still confined to the lung and nearby lymph nodes Lymph nodes
Small, bean-shaped masses of tissue scattered along the lymphatic system that act as filters and immune monitors, removing fluids, bacteria, or cancer cells that travel through the lymph system.
, surgery and other treatments give 60 to 80 percent of patients at least 5 more years to live.

To ascertain whether having the gene aberrations corresponds to lung cancer risk, researchers examined sputum sputum /spu·tum/ (spu´tum) [L.] expectoration; matter ejected from the trachea, bronchi, and lungs through the mouth.

sputum cruen´tum  bloody sputum.
 samples taken in the 1970s from 21 people with squamous-cell cancer, some before and some after they were diagnosed. All these participants in a cancer-surveillance study had been smokers, and most had been exposed to radon gas at a work site.

All 21 turned out to have an anomaly called hypermethylation affecting at least one of two genes that encode cancer-suppressing proteins called p16 and MGMT MGMT Management
MGMT Methyl Guanine Methyl Transferase
MGMT Make Good a Magnetic Track of ___ Degrees
, says study coauthor Steven A. Belinsky, a molecular biologist at the Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute in Albuquerque. Ten of these patients had hypermethylation affecting both genes, he and his colleagues report in the Nov. 1 CANCER RESEARCH.

In contrast, among another 123 smokers, who didn't have lung cancer when surveyed in the 1970s, only one-fourth showed the aberration in one of the genes, and only 3 percent had it in both, Belinsky says.

Squamous-cell cancer accounts for only about one-fourth of lung cancers. Still, "this study is encouraging," says Melvyn S. Tockman, a molecular epidemiologist at the Moffitt Cancer Center and the University of South Florida


    [
 in Tampa. It establishes that hypermethylation is prevalent in some lung cancer patients and is prominent enough in sputum to be a marker of disease, he says.

In hypermethylation, a methyl molecule binds to DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 where it doesn't belong. When hypermethylation strikes the regions of DNA that normally turn on the genes for p16 and MGMT, it can silence them, Belinsky says, so neither cancer suppressor sup·pres·sor  
n.
1. or sup·press·er One that suppresses: a suppressor of free speech.

2. A gene that suppresses the phenotypic expression of another gene, especially of a mutant gene.
 is made.

Although the cause of hypermethylation is unknown, its detection could provide physicians with a sign that cancer is present or imminent. In 11 of the 21 cancer patients, the sputum was collected 5 to 35 months before a physician diagnosed the patient's cancer, suggesting the test can indicate who's developing cancer.

"I think there is a good chance this test will be used to test high-risk people," says Adi F. Gazdar, a pathologist at the University of Texas-Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Anyone who has smoked a pack a day for 30 years or more would be a candidate for screening, he says.

The sputum test examines cells that had been shed from the inner lining of lung passages. Tockman says that it could well complement the helical helical /hel·i·cal/ (hel´i-k'l) spiral (1).

hel·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or having the shape of a helix; spiral.

2. Having a shape approximating that of a helix.
 CT scan CT scan: see CAT scan.


See CAT scan.
, a procedure that is being developed to detect very small lesions in other parts of the lung.
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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 25, 2000
Words:511
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