'Personalised'
cancer drug test
A
gene test that predicts which cancer drugs will be most effective for different
people is to be trialled in the US.
Preliminary results suggest the test, which looks at the unique
molecular traits of a tumour, predicts the best drug with 80% accuracy.
The first clinical trial is planned in 120 breast cancer patients next
year. If the results are good, the test could be applied to all
chemotherapy-treated cancers, Nature Medicine reports.
The researchers at Duke University, North Carolina, say the test has the
potential to revolutionise cancer care by identifying the right drug for each
individual patient.
Lead researcher Dr Anil Potti said the test could save lives and reduce
patients' exposure to the toxic side effects of chemotherapy drugs.
He explained: "Chemotherapy will likely continue to be the backbone
of many anti-cancer strategies.
"With the new test, we think that physicians will be able to
personalise chemotherapy in a way that should improve outcomes."
Tailored treatment
The trial will compare how well patients respond to chemotherapy
selected by the gene test versus chemotherapy chosen by doctors in the usual
way.
The test
works by scanning thousands of genes from a patient's tumour to produce a
"genomic" profile of the cancer's molecular makeup. Using the test on
cancer cells in the lab, the scientists were able to match the right
chemotherapy for the patient's type of the tumour.
When they checked these selections by observing how the patients
responded to the drugs in real life, the scientists discovered the predictions
were correct more than eight times out of 10.
Josephine
Querido of Cancer Research UK said: "Being able to predict who will
respond to a chemotherapy drug and who will not is a hot topic for cancer
researchers worldwide - it would allow doctors to identify which patients will
benefit most from the treatment.
"The
results presented in this study are very encouraging, and we hope approaches
like these will soon be available in the clinic so that more patients will
receive treatments that are right for them."
Quelle:
www.news.bbc.co.uk