We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
LGC Clinical Diagnostics

Download Mobile App




Lung Cancer Test Predicts Survival in Early Stages Better Than Current Methods

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 14 Jan 2025
Print article
Image: Illustration showing tumor (left sphere) containing a patchwork of cancerous cell communities and secondary tumor (right sphere) (Photo courtesy of Jeroen Claus/Phospho Biomedical Animation)
Image: Illustration showing tumor (left sphere) containing a patchwork of cancerous cell communities and secondary tumor (right sphere) (Photo courtesy of Jeroen Claus/Phospho Biomedical Animation)

Biological markers in lung cancer can help doctors identify patients who are at higher risk of their cancer returning or spreading to other parts of the body. This is especially important for individuals with stage 1 lung cancer, who typically undergo surgery without chemotherapy. However, for about 25% of stage 1 patients, the cancer returns, suggesting that they may have benefited from more frequent monitoring or chemotherapy. When doctors take a tumor sample, they generally only capture less than 1% of the tumor, and the genetic makeup can vary greatly from one region of the tumor to another. In 2019, a test called ORACLE was developed to address the lack of biological markers in lung cancer by analyzing genes that are expressed at high or low levels throughout the entire tumor. Researchers have now shown that ORACLE can predict lung cancer survival at the time of diagnosis more effectively than the clinical risk factors currently in use. This could help doctors make better-informed treatment decisions for stage 1 lung cancer patients, potentially reducing the likelihood of cancer recurrence or spread.

In a collaborative study involving researchers from the Francis Crick Institute (London, UK), the team tested ORACLE in 158 individuals with lung cancer as part of the Cancer Research UK-funded TRACERx study. The results indicated that ORACLE could predict patient survival more accurately than the current clinical standards, such as tumor stage. These new findings suggest that ORACLE could identify stage 1 lung cancer patients with a lower chance of survival who might benefit from chemotherapy in addition to surgery. Current clinical standards were not able to provide this information for stage 1 patients. Published in the journal Nature Cancer, the research also showed that high ORACLE risk scores were associated with regions of the tumor that were more likely to metastasize.

Moreover, when the researchers examined 359 current and potential lung cancer drugs, they found that high ORACLE risk scores predicted a better response to certain types of chemotherapy, particularly platinum-based drugs like cisplatin. This is because regions of the tumor with high ORACLE scores tend to have unstable DNA, known as chromosomal instability, which is specifically targeted by platinum drugs. The same research team recently discovered that alterations in a key gene called FAT1 contribute to chromosomal instability, and FAT1 is also one of the genetic variations that ORACLE detects. Moving forward, the researchers plan to compare outcomes for individuals with high ORACLE scores receiving standard care versus those receiving additional surveillance or chemotherapy, to determine if the test improves survival, even for those diagnosed at the earliest stage.

“ORACLE can now predict survival rates in patients diagnosed at the earliest stage,” said Dhruva Biswas, Translation Fellow at the Crick, Postdoctoral Fellow at the UCL Cancer Institute, Associate Research Scientist at Yale School of Medicine, and co-first author. “If validated in larger cohorts of patients with lung cancer, doctors could one day use ORACLE to help make informed treatment decisions, bringing lessons from cancer evolution into the clinic.”

Related Links:
Francis Crick Institute

New
Gold Member
Syphilis Screening Test
VDRL Antigen MR
Gold Member
Troponin T QC
Troponin T Quality Control
New
Adenovirus Test
S3334E ADV Adenovirus Kit
New
Chemiluminescence Immunoassay Analyzer
AutoLumo A6200/A6600

Print article

Channels

Microbiology

view channel
Image: The test covers the most important bacterial pathogens across all age groups with a single cartridge (Photo courtesy of BHCS)

POC PCR Test Rapidly Detects Bacterial Meningitis Directly at Point of Sample Collection

Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. Pathogens typically enter the body through the respiratory tract and spread via the bloodstream. The infection can... Read more

Pathology

view channel
Image: The technique predicts how well some breast cancer patients will respond to chemotherapy (Photo courtesy of Shutterstock)

New Technique Predicts Tumor’s Responsiveness to Breast Cancer Treatment

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women worldwide, with 2.3 million new cases diagnosed each year. In the era of personalized medicine, targeted therapies for different types of breast cancer... Read more

Technology

view channel
Image: Human tear film protein sampling methods (Photo courtesy of Clinical Proteomics. 2024 Mar 13;21:23. doi: 10.1186/s12014-024-09475-8)

New Lens Method Analyzes Tears for Early Disease Detection

Bodily fluids, including tears and saliva, carry proteins that are released from different parts of the body. The presence of specific proteins in these biofluids can be a sign of health issues.... Read more

Industry

view channel
Image: The game-changing immunoassay diagnostics platform delivers results from whole blood sample in 10 minutes (Photo courtesy of SpinChip)

bioMérieux Acquires Norwegian Immunoassay Start-Up SpinChip Diagnostics

bioMérieux (Marcy l’Étoile, France) has agreed to acquire SpinChip Diagnostics (Oslo, Norway), the developer of a game-changing immunoassay diagnostics platform. The small benchtop analyzer is well adapted... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.