AUSTIN, TexasWedding high technology to recent advances in understanding the molecular biology of oral squamous cell carcinoma, a University of Texas research team has developed a prototype sensor that can diagnose the most common form of oral cancer in about 10 minutes without a biopsy.
The fully automated lab-on-a-chip measures levels of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), which is overexpressed by oral cancers. The researchers are now expanding the sensor's detection powers to include other proteins and genes that serve as biomarkers for the cancer before they begin clinical trials.
"It could take several months to more than a year before we make the transition," said senior author John T. McDevitt, PhD, professor of chemistry and biochemistry. "But the diagnostic platform has been built, and it's just a matter of fine tuning the components that are already in place."
In evaluating the device, he and his colleagues compared the expression of EGFR in three cell lines of oral cancer with expression in healthy cells. They found that the cancer cell lines produced significantly higher levels of the receptor than did the controls. The sensor results correlated well with those from flow cytometry, regarded as the gold standard for measuring protein expression.
Completing each test run of the sensor took about 9 minutes, from collecting a sample to display of the results. The researchers reported their findings in Lab on a Chip, a journal of The Royal Society of Chemistry (7:941-1080, 2007).

Speed and efficiency
