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NCI Begins Validation Study of New Test to Detect EarlyStage Liver Cancer
A two-year study to validate a test to detect early-stage liver
cancer has been initiated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI),
part of the National Institutes of Health, at six centers* across
the United States. This test, conceived with the assistance of
NCI’s Early Detection Research Network (EDRN), looks at whether
a substance called des-gamma carboxyprothrombin (DCP) can identify
those at risk for liver cancer.
Validation proving that the measurement of a substance accurately
signifies the risk for or presence of cancer is the critical
step to create a truly useful test. “It’s the first
study testing a marker for liver cancer, and the first Phase II
EDRN-supported study,” said Sudhir Srivastava, Ph.D., who
heads EDRN as chief of the Cancer Biomarkers Research Group in
NCI’s Division of Cancer Prevention.
Liver cancer, or hepatocellular carcinoma, with over 20,000 estimated
new cases this year in the United States, is both one of the more
common cancers worldwide and one of the few cancers in the United
States in which the number of new cases is rising, and expected
to continue to rise over the next two decades. Frequent surveillance
of patients with liver cirrhosis is recommended, but current procedures
have shortcomings. Alpha-fetoprotein, a blood test currently used
for surveillance of liver cancer, suffers from poor sensitivity
and specificity (ability to determine if someone actually has,
or does not have, liver cancer). Liver ultrasound is dependent
on the skills and knowledge of the technician and can lead to false-negative
results. This EDRN-supported study looks to improve upon these
negatives.
DCP is a protein precursor of prothrombin, one of the factors produced
by the liver to help the blood clot. In patients with liver cancer,
this protein seems to be elevated compared to those without liver
cancer. Early studies have shown that DCP is better than alpha-fetoprotein
for the diagnosis of liver cancer and has close to 90 percent accuracy.
The investigators conducting the validation study, headed by Jorge A. Marrero,
M.D., of the University of Michigan, and Paul Wagner, Ph.D., program director
in NCI’s Cancer Biomarkers Research Group, plan to enroll 450 patients
diagnosed with liver cancer, of which at least 170 will be early stage. Four
hundred fifty patients with cirrhosis and no cancer will serve as controls. The
participating institutions will collect samples from patients in this study,
and the samples will be analyzed for DCP using an assay manufactured by Eisai
Company, Teaneck, N.J. The primary goal of the study is to determine whether
DCP can lead to improved accuracy in the detection of early-stage hepatocellular
carcinoma.
This trial will run for two years and final results are expected in early 2007.
If successful, this study will provide a much-needed tool for the early detection
of liver cancer. Additionally, EDRN’s gastrointestinal collaborative group
is working on two other early novel detection tests for liver cancer for future
validation.
EDRN, established by NCI in early 2000, is a broad, interdisciplinary consortium
whose work is aimed at both identifying and validating cancer biomarkers for
use in early cancer detection, and is divided among collaborative groups studying
specific tumors. Numerous proteins and genes have been linked with a variety
of cancers, which can make them targets for therapy, as well as targets for identifying
the risk of cancer onset, progression, or recurrence.
For more information about the Early Detection Research Network
(EDRN), visit the EDRN home page at <http://www3.cancer.gov/prevention/cbrg/edrn>
For more information about cancer, visit the NCI Web site
at <http://www.cancer.gov> or
call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
* The six institutions and principal investigators include:
- University of Michigan; Ann Arbor, Mich. (Jorge A. Marrero, M.D.)
- Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, N.Y. (Myron Schwartz, M.D.)
- University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. (Rajender Reddy,
M.D.)
- Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. (Lewis Roberts, M.D., Ph.D.)
- St. Louis University; St Louis, Mo. (Alex Befeler, M.D.)
- Stanford University; Stanford, Calif. (Mindie Nguyen, M.D.)
In addition, the Data Management and Coordinating Center for
the study is headed by Ziding Feng, Ph.D., at the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Wash.
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