Rush University Medical Center researchers have identified a molecule that may help early-stage ovarian cancer.
Rush University Medical Center researchers have identified a molecule that may help detect early-stage ovarian cancer. The molecule, an antibody that the human body manufactures, is an autoimmune response to mesothelin. This well-studied protein is found in abundance on the surface of ovarian cancer cells but present only in limited amounts in normal human tissue.
The study is published in the online version issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, published by the American Society for Cancer Research.
"The finding is extremely important because at present medical tests are unable to detect ovarian cancer in its early stages, which is why death rates from this disease are so high," said Judith Luborsky, PhD, professor of pharmacology, obstetrics and gynecology and preventive medicine at Rush and lead author of the study.
"Our approach to discovering cancer biomarkers was unique in this study. Instead of investigating molecules specific to ovarian cancer alone, we asked what molecules women with a risk of ovarian cancer and those with ovarian cancer had in common," Luborsky said.
The study enabled the researchers to explain the link between infertility and ovarian cancer that has been established in numerous epidemiological surveys.
"More important, with the discovery of the mesothelin antibody, we now have what appears to be a biomarker that can potentially be used in screening tests to help us conquer ovarian cancer," Luborsky said.
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In the study at Rush, researchers tested for mesothelin antibodies in the bloodstream of 109 women who were infertile, 28 women diagnosed with ovarian cancer, 24 women with benign ovarian tumors or cysts, and 152 healthy women. Infertility was due to endometriosis, ovulatory dysfunction or premature ovarian failure or was unexplained.
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Why the presence of mesothelin antibodies in the bloodstream should be linked with ovarian cancer is not clear.
"It has been hypothesized that an autoimmune response precedes or somehow contributes to the development and progression of malignant tumors," Luborsky said. "We think that antibodies may arise in response to very early abnormal changes in ovarian tissue that may or may not progress to malignancy, depending on additional triggering events. Or, alternatively, antibodies may bind to normal cells in the ovary, causing dysfunction and leading to infertility -- and, in a subpopulation of women, to the development of ovarian cancer."
Other researchers involved in the study were Yi Yu, MS, and Seby Edassery, MS, both from Rush, and a group led by Ingegerd Hellstrom, MD, PhD, and Karl Eric Hellstrom, MD, PhD, and including Yuan Yee Yip, BS, Jade Jaffar, BS, and Pu Liu, PhD, from Harborview Medical Center at the University of Washington.
Source-Newswise