Transcriptomic Molecular Markers for Screening Human Colon Cancer in Stool and Tissue
There is a need for sensitive and specific diagnostic molecular markers that can be used to monitor early patterns of gene expression in non-invasive exfoliated colonocytes shed in the stool, and in situ in adenoma-carcinoma epithelium of the colon. RNA-based detection methods are more comprehensive...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cancer genomics & proteomics 2007, Vol.4 (1), p.1-20 |
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Zusammenfassung: | There is a need for sensitive and specific diagnostic molecular markers that can be used to monitor early patterns of gene
expression in non-invasive exfoliated colonocytes shed in the stool, and in situ in adenoma-carcinoma epithelium of the colon.
RNA-based detection methods are more comprehensive than either DNA-, protein- or methylation-based screening methods. By routinely
and systematically being able to perform quantitative gene expression studies on these samples using less than ten colon cancer
genes selected by the enormous resources of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Genome Anatomy Project, we were able to
monitor changes at various stages in the neoplastic process, allowing for reliable diagnostic screening of colon cancer particularly
at the early, premalignant stages. Although the expression of some of the genes tested in tissue showed less variability in
normal or cancerous patients than in stool, the stool by itself is suitable for screening. Thus, a transcriptomic approach
using stool or tissue samples promises to offer more sensitivity and specificity than currently used molecular screening methods
for colon cancer. A larger prospective clinical study utilizing stool and tissue samples derived from many control and colon
cancer patients, to allow for a statistically valid analysis, is now urgently required to determine the true sensitivity and
specificity of the transcriptomic screening approach for this preventable cancer. |
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ISSN: | 1109-6535 |