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
UPI Sports Calendar for Monday, Nov. 9 (5 min)
NHL: Edmonton 5, Colorado 3 (26 min)
MLS: Los Angeles 1, Chivas USA 0 (29 min)
MLS: Houston 1, Seattle 0 (OT) (31 min)
UPI NewsTrack Sports (35 min)
NBA: Oklahoma City 102, Orlando 74 (52 min)
Kurt Busch wins Dickies 500 in Texas
fark
Afghans replace opium poppies with bumper wheat crop, gluten intolerance grips nation
Investigative journalism class frees 11 innocent people from prison. So the prosecutor subpoenas...
Photoshop theme: Elderly superheros or supervillains
Suicidal, gold-medal winning, former Naval Academy water polo star plunges 212 feet off the GWB...
NY Times reporter tries to learn about Scientology by taking their free personality test. All goes...
A Woman and her two sons live in a rusty 1973 Suburban in Los Angeles. Fark: She's 97 and her sons...