An ISET Healthcare portal for medical professionals in the Middle East
Thursday 11th March 2010
Home » Innovation & Advances

Biomedical Scientists Develop New Test for Pancreatic Cancer

Written By: admin on January 22, 2010 0

Researchers at Barts, the London NHS Trust and Queen Mary University’s Institute of Cancer, have collaborated on a new test, which could help identify victims of pancreatic cancer.

Considered the most deadly form of cancer, the disease is difficult to diagnose because CT or MRI scans can only get limited access to the organ, due to its position close to the spine and behind major organs.

The new testing process, which can reliably detect presence of the cancer in urine for the first time, has been praised as a promising step forward in treating people with the condition.

Dr David Tuveson, group leader in tumour modelling and experimental medicine at Cancer Research UK’s Cambridge Research Institute, said that the test could overtake current methods for detection.

“Some places in the world screen family members where there is a clear family history [of pancreatic cancer] but the major challenge has been to find a reliable way to monitor these people and intervene at the right time,” he explained.

According to the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, a person with multiple family members with pancreatic cancer is six times more likely to develop the disease.

Written by Angela Newbury Courtesy http://www.mediplacements.com

Add this article to the following Bookmark Services

Digg this!Add to del.icio.us!Stumble this!Add to Techorati!Share on Facebook!Seed Newsvine!Reddit!Add to Yahoo!


Have your say:

More about this from BIOMEDME.COM

Aerated Drinks Intake Linked To Pancreatic Cancer
Those who drink sugar-sweetened carbonated drinks were 87% likelier to develop pancreatic cancer than...
Children’s brain tumor linked to neural stem cells
Medulloblastomas are malignant tumors formed from poorly developed cells at a very early stage of their...
Blood test could hold key to breast cancer
Scottish scientists think they have spotted an early warning sign for breast cancer which could dramatically...
New Findings on -How Cells Turn Cancerous?
Researchers from Yale Cancer Center and the Fudan-Yale Center for Biomedical Research at Fudan University...