Blood Test Can Detect Cancer Before Conventional Diagnosis

PanSeer detected five common types of cancer in 88 percent of postdiagnosis patients
blood samples
blood samples

TUESDAY, July 21, 2020 (HealthDay News) -- A noninvasive blood test based on circulating tumor DNA methylation can detect cancer four years before conventional diagnosis, according to a study published online July 21 in Nature Communications.

Xingdong Chen, from Fudan University in China, and colleagues reported preliminary results of PanSeer, a noninvasive blood test based on circulating tumor DNA methylation, on samples from 605 asymptomatic individuals from the Taizhou Longitudinal Study, 191 of whom were diagnosed with stomach, esophageal, colorectal, lung, or liver cancer within four years. Plasma samples from an additional 223 cancer patients and 200 primary tumor and normal tissues were also assayed.

The researchers found that five common types of cancer were detected with PanSeer in 88 percent of postdiagnosis patients with a specificity of 96 percent. In 95 percent of asymptomatic individuals who were later diagnosed, PanSeer also detected cancer; longitudinal studies are needed to confirm this result.

"The PanSeer assay provides a preliminary demonstration of early detection of multiple cancer types four years prior to conventional diagnosis in a robust manner, and lays the foundation for a noninvasive blood test for early detection of cancer in a high-risk (or average-risk in the future) population," the authors write.

Several authors disclosed financial ties to Singlera Genomics; several authors are inventors on a patent held by Singlera Genomics.

Abstract/Full Text

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