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In this photo taken April
6, 2010, released by Boston Boston University School of
Medicine, David Lowney, left, undergoes a bronchoscopy by
Boston University School of Medicine researchers Dr. Avrum
Spira, center, and Dr. Frank Schrembi, right, in Boston. The
procedure is part of a test to measure a genetic change
inside patients' windpipes to try to tell which smokers are
it the highest risk of developing lung cancer. (AP
Photo/Boston University School of Medicine, David Keough)
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Developing
test to
warn
smokers
of
cancer
danger
By
LAURAN
NEERGAARD
AP
Medical
Writer
Scientists
may have
found a
way to
tell
which
smokers
are at
highest
risk of
developing
lung
cancer:
measuring
a
telltale
genetic
change
inside
their
windpipes.
A test
based on
the
research
is being
developed
in hopes
of
detecting
this
deadly
cancer
earlier,
when
it's
more
treatable.
And if
the work
pans
out, the
next big
question
is:
Might it
even be
possible
to
reverse
this
genetic
chain
reaction
before
it ends
in
full-blown
cancer?
The
researchers
found a
tantalizing
early
hint
among a
handful
of
people
given an
experimental
drug.
"They're
heading
toward
lung
cancer,
and we
can
identify
them
with
this
genomic
test,"
said Dr.
Avrum
Spira of
Boston
University
School
of
Medicine,
who led
the
research
published
Wednesday
in the
journal
Science
Translational
Medicine.
Lung
cancer —
which
killed
nearly
160,000
Americans
last
year —
is the
leading
cancer
killer,
and
cigarette
smoke is
by far
its main
cause.
Yet, not
all
smokers
develop
lung
cancer;
Spira
cites
estimates
that 10
to 20
percent
will.
The risk
depends
in part
on how
much
people
smoke,
for how
long and
how long
ago they
quit —
but
there's
no way
to
predict
who will
escape
it and
who will
not. Nor
is there
a good
way to
detect
early-stage
tumors.
Consequently,
most
people
are
diagnosed
too late
for
today's
treatments
to do
much
good.
"Even
for
people
who have
stopped
smoking,
there's
a
significant
risk of
cancer
down the
road,
and it
would be
nice to
identify
which
patients
are
really
at
risk,"
said
Duke
University
lung
cancer
specialist
Dr. Neal
Ready,
who
wasn't
involved
in the
new
research
but
called
it
intriguing.
"To have
some
sort of
molecular
test
that
would
identify
those
patients
would be
very
useful,"
he
added,
because
they
could
receive
close
monitoring
with
lung
scans
that
aren't
practical
for
everybody.
Rather
than
focusing
on the
lung
itself,
Spira's
team
took a
different
approach.
Smoking
bathes
the
entire
respiratory
tract in
toxins.
So he
hunted
for the
earliest
signs of
impending
lung
cancer
upstream,
in how
different
genes
are
turned
on and
off
inside
the
upper
airway
as the
body
tries to
defend
itself
and
those
defenses
weaken
over
time.
At least
100,000
smokers
or
former
smokers
a year
have a
tube
snaked
down
their
throat
to look
for
signs of
cancer
if an
X-ray or
other
test
detects
something
suspicious,
Spira
explained.
Bronchoscopies
can be
used for
a look
down
into the
lung,
but
Spira
was
interested
instead
in cells
that
line the
windpipe,
collected
during
the same
procedure.
Sure
enough,
he found
a
genomic
signature
— a
pattern
of gene
activity
— in
otherwise
normal
windpipes
that
distinguished
some
current
or
former
smokers
who had
lung
cancer
from
those
who
didn't.
Then
with Dr.
Andrea
Bild of
the
University
of Utah,
Spira
analyzed
cells
from 129
current
and
former
smokers
and
found
the
genes
involved
were
part of
a
well-known
cancer-causing
pathway
named
the PI3K
pathway.
When
PI3K-related
genes
are too
active,
too much
cell
growth
can
occur,
but most
studies
have
examined
those
genes
only in
tumors.
On
Wednesday,
Spira
reported
finding
PI3K
activation
in some
current
or
former
smokers
with
precancerous
lesions,
too, but
not in
those
with
other
lung
diseases.
Spira
cannot
estimate
how much
lung
cancer
might
come
from
this
genetic
pathway.
Nor does
the work
mean
it's OK
for
people
without
this
marker
to keep
puffing.
Other
lung
cancer
pathways
could be
at work,
and
smoking
also
causes
heart
attacks,
other
lung
diseases
and
other
cancers.
But a
company
Spira
helped
found,
Allegro
Diagnostics
Inc., is
beginning
a study
of up to
800
current
and
former
smokers
who need
a
bronchoscopy
anyway
to see
how well
a test
based on
the
research
performs.
Moreover,
there
are some
experimental
drugs
being
designed
to fight
PI3K
activation.
One
compound
already
had been
tested
in nine
smokers
with
precancerous
lesions,
six of
whom had
their
lesions
improve.
Spira's
team
went
back and
checked
those
study
participants'
previously
stored
airway
cells —
and
found
those
who had
responded
to the
compound
indeed
had
their
PI3K
activity
drop, a
preliminary
but
exciting
clue in
the
quest to
develop
cancer-preventing
drugs.
"There's
enough
evidence
in this
article
to start
down
that
road" of
researching
PI3K
chemoprevention,
said
Duke's
Ready.
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