Early-stage lung cancer may be detected from a drop of blood

BOSTON - Lung cancer, the leading cause of cancer death, is usually diagnosed at a late stage when the survival rate is extremely low. Early-stage lung cancer is mostly asymptomatic, and low-dose spiral CT imaging, the current method for detecting early lung cancer lesions, isn't feasible as a widespread screening test for the general population due to high cost and the radiation hazard of repeated screenings. A new study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences provides proof-of-concept for the ability of a drop of blood to reveal lung cancer in asymptomatic patients. The study was co-led by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH): Leo Cheng, PhD, associate biophysicist, in Pathology, Radiology, and the Athinsula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, and David Christiani, MD, MPH, pulmonary and critical care physician.
"Our study demonstrates the potential for developing a sensitive screening tool for the early detection of lung cancer," says Cheng. "The predictive model we constructed can identify which people may be harboring lung cancer. Individuals with suspicious findings would then be referred for further evaluation by imaging tests, such as low-dose CT, for a definitive diagnosis."
Cheng, Christiani, and their co-investigators built a lung-cancer predictive model based on metabolomics profiles in blood. Metabolomics analyzes cellular metabolite flows to decipher healthy and pathological states by studying the metabolome-the dynamic biochemical suite found in all cells, fluids, and tissues of the body. The presence of lung cancer, with its altered physiology and pathology, can cause changes in the blood metabolites produced or consumed by cancer cells in the lungs. The researchers measured metabolomics profiles in blood using high-resolution magnetic resonance spectroscopy, a tool that can examine an array of compounds within living cells by measuring the collective reactions of metabolites.
https://www.pnas.org/content/118/51/e2110633118
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