Innovative Blood Test for Cancer by Johnson and Johnson:
A
new test capable of detecting a single cancer cell among a billion healthy
cells in a small sample of blood is under development. Verde, a Johnson and
Johnson company, and Ortho Biotech Oncology Research & Development (ORD), a
unit of Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical R & D have partnered with
researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH, Boston, MA) to work on
bringing the test to the market.
The
initial prototype was developed by a team of doctors, engineers, and biologists
led by Dr. Daniel Haber and Mamet Toner at Massachusetts General Hospital was
first reported in 2007. The test detects circulating tumor cells (CTCs), cancer
cells that break off from the tumor and get carried away in the blood stream.
These CTCs are extremely rare; one may be detected for every billion normal
healthy blood cancer cells screened.
Haber
and Toner have designed a CTC-chip that contains thousands of miniature pillars
coated with antibodies that bind to CTCs. When a sample of blood is passed over
the chip, the normal cells go through, but the CTCs stick. Specials stains then
allow investigators to count the number of CTCs in a patient's blood sample.
This
test may be used to help doctors quickly make decisions about how to proceed
when treating a patient's cancer. If a doctor gives a particular drug and the
number of cancer cells in the patient's blood drops, then the doctor will stick
with this treatment. If the number of cancer cells circulating in the blood
increase or remain the same, the doctor can switch to another drug and which
might work better at killing the cancer.
For
example, doctors can give a drug or radiation treatment and then do CT scan
months later to see if the patient's tumor has decreased in size. A patient may
not live through more than a few rounds of treatment adjustment if they must
wait to see if a change in tumor size can be detected. While the CT scan is a
full body X-ray, the CTC-chip is simpler and only requires a few teaspoons of
blood and can gauge whether the treatment was successful sooner.
The
CTC-chip has been tested experimentally in approximately 200 cancer patients. A
$15 million grant provided by the American Association for Cancer Research
(AACR) Stand Up to Cancer telethon will enable investigators at four major
research institutions to study the test in more cancer patients. These
institutes include: Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston, MA), University of
Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
(Boston, MA), and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York, NY).
Right
now the chip is expensive (approximately $500) and requires expertise to use.
The collaboration with Johnson and Johnson will help MGH investigators find
ways to make the chip faster, cheaper, more sensitive, and easier to use by
physicians. Hopes are high. This chip may change the way cancer is diagnosed
and treated in the near future.
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