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Oncology NEWS International. Vol. 15 No. 6
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Prognostic Biomarkers for Prostate Cancer Move Forward

June 1, 2006

WASHINGTON—Novel prognostic biomarkers for prostate cancer are moving toward the clinic and may eventually join Gleason score and other predictors of relapse to help with treatment decisions, according to data on two candidate markers presented at the 97th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research.

Clinicians now rely primarily on a tumor's Gleason score, along with other variables such as stage and PSA levels, to estimate a man's risk of recurrence after prostatectomy. However, these predictive markers are not useful in all cases. For instance, men with an intermediate Gleason score, around 6 or 7, have about a 50/50 chance of recurrence.

Universal Bead Array

The lack of a more accurate prognostic tool for these men is frustrating, said Tracy Downs, MD, a surgeon at the University of California, San Diego, Medical Center, who is collaborating with Illumina, Inc. of San Diego on the development of one of the markers. "There has to be a molecular signature that's predicting the biological nature and aggressiveness of these cancers," he said.

In search of that marker, Illumina has identified a group of 16 genes whose expression pattern appears to correlate with relapse rates (abstract 1203). Of the 16 genes, 10 are positively correlated with cancer progression, and six are negatively correlated.

This microarray uses Illumina's "universal bead array" technology, which requires only tiny amounts of DNA and RNA and can run up to 96 different tests on a single tray. The microarray was able to identify two very distinct groups, among 71 prostate cancer patients, said Jian-Bing Fan, PhD, director of scientific research at Illumina. One group had a 75% chance of relapse in 5 years, while the other group had just a 20% chance.

The researchers are now planning validation studies with other clinical centers and data sets, Dr. Fan said.

Methylated PITX2

The other prognostic marker for prostate cancer highlighted at AACR is the methylation of a single gene, called PITX2, which correlated with poor prognosis in a validation study with samples from 600 prostatectomy patients from three clinical centers (abstract LB-226). After 5 to 6 years of follow-up, 64 of the patients had a cancer recurrence, defined as a rise in PSA levels. Of these, 49 were PITX2 positive, using median methylation level as the cut-off point; 15 of the relapsed patients had methylation levels below the median.

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