Esophageal cancer analysis explored

Published: June 27, 2007 at 12:23 PM

ANN ARBOR, Mich., June 27 (UPI) -- A U.S. study examining proteins expressed in esophageal cancer cells may lead to new ways to detect and follow the progression of such cancers.

Esophageal cancer is increasing rapidly in Western countries and has become the seventh-leading cause of cancer-related death. But current technology doesn't allow physicians to determine how the disease will progress or how to best treat it.

David Lubman and colleagues at the University of Michigan developed a technique that identifies proteins in the esophagus. That allows physicians to determine which patients might develop esophageal cancer.

The researchers examined the proteins present in patients with a condition called Barrett metaplasia, in which the internal layers of the esophagus contain abnormal cells that can develop into cancer.

Although the technique needs to be further validated, the researchers said it might have broad potential for identifying tumors.

The study by Lubman, Jia Zhao, Andrew Chang, Chen Li, Kerby Shedden, Dafydd Thomas, David Misek, Arun Prasad Manoharan, Thomas Giordano and David Beer is reported in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Study shows no change in FDA approval time (3 min)
Cut greenhouse gases = Saving lives (18 min)
Peptide-mineral interaction images created (45 min)
U.S. markets edge higher Wednesday morning (52 min)
German skater's doping ban upheld (54 min)
Linguist: 'Most' means 80 to 95 percent
Invasive Asian carp spread in Great Lakes
fark
Two arrested for threatening YouTube rap, are sentenced to read 80,000 barely literate YouTube comments...
Another reason China is kicking our ass: Push button boob jobs with instant D-liscious results
"It often is reported that 46 million turkeys will be eaten on Thanksgiving, and that it is the...
It's not quite Thanksgiving yet, but the Christmas trees are already trying to kill us all
You claim the government owes you $200 million. Do you c) rent a van, hang a "My $200 Million Dollars"...
If at first you don't succeed at breaking into a supermarket, trap, trap yourself in the ventilation...