Diagnosis of ovarian cancer based on mass spectra of blood samples

Author(s):  
Hong Tang ◽  
Y. Mukomel ◽  
E. Fink
2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-225

In recent months a bumper crop of genomes has been completed, including the fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe) and rice (Oryza sativa). Two large-scale studies ofSaccharomyces cerevisiaeprotein complexes provided a picture of the eukaryotic proteome as a network of complexes. Amongst the other stories of interest was a demonstration that proteomic analysis of blood samples can be used to detect ovarian cancer, perhaps even as early as stage I.


2002 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 463-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Ben David ◽  
A. Chetrit ◽  
G. Hirsh-Yechezkel ◽  
E. Friedman ◽  
B.D. Beck ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: To study the role of BRCA mutations in ovarian cancer survival. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Blood samples and specimens of ovarian tumors (whenever blood samples were not available) at the time of the primary surgery were obtained in the course of a nationwide case-control study of women with ovarian cancer in Israel. The three common BRCA mutations in Israel (185delAG, 5382insC, and 6174delT) were analyzed with a multiplex polymerase chain reaction to amplify the exons containing the three mutations using fluor-labeled primers in a single reaction. Because each mutation is a small insertion or deletion, they can be detected as length polymorphisms. Patients were followed for up to 5 years (range, 20 to 64 months). Statistical analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test. Stepwise Cox regression analysis was used for determination of independent prognostic factors. RESULTS: This report is based on 896 blood or tumor specimens analyzed for the presence of the BRCA mutations. Of these, 234 women (26.1%) were found to be positive. A significant difference in survival pattern was found between BRCA1/BRCA2 carriers and noncarriers among the women with invasive ovarian cancer (median survival, 53.4 months v 37.8 months; 3-year survival, 65.8% v 51.9%, respectively). These differences were independent of age at diagnosis or stage of the disease. CONCLUSION: Our data indicate that the survival of patients with ovarian cancer is affected by BRCA germline mutation, at least in the early years after diagnosis.


2004 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
T P Conrads ◽  
V A Fusaro ◽  
S Ross ◽  
D Johann ◽  
V Rajapakse ◽  
...  

Serum proteomic pattern diagnostics is an emerging paradigm employing low-resolution mass spectrometry (MS) to generate a set of biomarker classifiers. In the present study, we utilized a well-controlled ovarian cancer serum study set to compare the sensitivity and specificity of serum proteomic diagnostic patterns acquired using a high-resolution versus a low-resolution MS platform. In blinded testing sets, the high-resolution mass spectral data contained multiple diagnostic signatures that were superior to the low-resolution spectra in terms of sensitivity and specificity (P<0.00001) throughout the range of modeling conditions. Four mass spectral feature set patterns acquired from data obtained exclusively with the high-resolution mass spectrometer were 100% specific and sensitive in their diagnosis of serum samples as being acquired from either unaffected patients or those suffering from ovarian cancer. Important to the future of proteomic pattern diagnostics is the ability to recognize inferior spectra statistically, so that those resulting from a specific process error are recognized prior to their potentially incorrect (and damaging) diagnosis. To meet this need, we have developed a series of quality-assurance and in-process control procedures to (a) globally evaluate sources of sample variability, (b) identify outlying mass spectra, and (c) develop quality-control release specifications. From these quality-assurance and control (QA/QC) specifications, we identified 32 mass spectra out of the total 248 that showed statistically significant differences from the norm. Hence, 216 of the initial 248 high-resolution mass spectra were determined to be of high quality and were remodeled by pattern-recognition analysis. Again, we obtained four mass spectral feature set patterns that also exhibited 100% sensitivity and specificity in blinded validation tests (68/68 cancer: including 18/18 stage I, and 43/43 healthy). We conclude that (a) the use of high-resolution MS yields superior classification patterns as compared with those obtained with lower resolution instrumentation; (b) although the process error that we discovered did not have a deleterious impact on the present results obtained from proteomic pattern analysis, the major source of spectral variability emanated from mass spectral acquisition, and not bias at the clinical collection site; (c) this variability can be reduced and monitored through the use of QA/QC statistical procedures; (d) multiple and distinct proteomic patterns, comprising low molecular weight biomarkers, detected by high-resolution MS achieve accuracies surpassing individual biomarkers, warranting validation in a large clinical study.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 168
Author(s):  
Elena Ioana Braicu ◽  
Andreas du Bois ◽  
Jalid Sehouli ◽  
Julia Beck ◽  
Sonia Prader ◽  
...  

Background: Chromosomal instability, a hallmark of cancer, results in changes in the copy number state. These deviant copy number states can be detected in the cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and provide a quantitative measure of the ctDNA levels by converting cfDNA next-generation sequencing results into a genome-wide copy number instability score (CNI-Score). Our aim was to determine the role of the CNI-Score in detecting epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and its role as a marker to monitor the response to treatment. Methods: Blood samples were prospectively collected from 109 patients with high-grade EOC. cfDNA was extracted and analyzed using a clinical-grade assay designed to calculate a genome-wide CNI-Score from low-coverage sequencing data. Stored data from 241 apparently healthy controls were used as a reference set. Results: Comparison of the CNI-Scores of primary EOC patients versus controls yielded sensitivities of 91% at a specificity of 95% to detect OC, respectively. Significantly elevated CNI-Scores were detected in primary (median: 87, IQR: 351) and recurrent (median: 346, IQR: 1891) blood samples. Substantially reduced CNI-Scores were detected after primary debulking surgery. Using a cut-off of 24, a diagnostic sensitivity of 87% for primary and recurrent EOC was determined at a specificity of 95%. CNI-Scores above this threshold were detected in 21/23 primary tumor (91%), 36/42 of platinum-eligible recurrent (85.7%), and 19/22 of non-platinum-eligible recurrent (86.3%) samples, respectively. Conclusion: ctDNA-quantification based on genomic instability determined by the CNI-Score was a biomarker with high diagnostic accuracy in high-grade EOC. The applied assay might be a promising tool for diagnostics and therapy monitoring, as it requires no a priori information about the tumor.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 5067-5067
Author(s):  
P. Wimberger ◽  
R. Kimmig ◽  
A. Schulte ◽  
M. E. Scheulen ◽  
S. Kasimir-Bauer

5067 Background: Recent studies in patients (pts) with breast cancer have demonstrated the prognostic significance of disseminated tumor cells (DTC) in the bone marrow (BM) which even can survive high-dose chemotherapy. For ovarian cancer, the impact of chemotherapy on DTC is unknown. Here we evaluated whether first-line chemotherapy with carboplatinum and paclitaxel can eliminate DTC in BM and peripheral blood (PB) of pts with primary ovarian cancer (OC, FIGO IC-IIIC). Methods: PB of 28 pts with OC and bilateral BM aspirates of 18/28 pts were assessed for DTC before and after chemotherapy using density gradient centrifugation and an immunocytochemical cytokeratin (CK) assay with the anti-CK antibody A45-B/B3. Results: We identified CK+ cells in 7/28 blood samples (25%) before therapy with a mean number of 2 cells/20 ml (range 1–3). After chemotherapy, CK+ cells were detected in 3/28 blood samples (11%) with a mean number of 9 cells/20 ml (range 1–18). In 5 out of these 7 CK+ patients prior to therapy, no CK+ cells were found after therapy, a no change and a reduction of DTC could be demonstrated in one patient each. CK+ cells were found in 10/18 BM samples (56%) before therapy with a mean number of 2 cells/9x10E6 BM cells (range 1–7) and in 8/18 BM samples (44%) after therapy with a mean number of 10 cells/9x10E6 BM cells (range 2–35). After chemotherapy, no CK+ cells were found in 6 pts, no change in DTC counts was documented in 2 pts and a significant enhancement of DTC was shown in 6 pts, including 4 pts who had no CK+ cells before chemotherapy. Conclusions: DTC are frequently present in the BM and PB of pts with OC and are not always successfully eliminated after platinum-based chemotherapy. It has to be considered, whether these pts might profit from an additive immunotherapy as already shown by the intraperitoneal application of a trifunctional antibody targeting EpCAM, CD3 and accessory cells (Proc Am Assoc Cancer Res 46: 4260, 2005). No significant financial relationships to disclose.


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