Scientists have
identified genes enabling breast cancer cells to spread
to the lungs, a discovery that could improve diagnosis and
treatment of the disease. The set of genes not only
reveals where the cancer will spread but also how
virulent it is likely to be. The genes could be
potential targets for existing or new breast cancer drugs,
according to the researchers.
"We have
looked for and found a specific set of genes that some
breast cancers utilize to form metastasis to the lungs
specifically," Joan Massague, of the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute at the Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, said on
Wednesday. The lungs, with the bones, liver, and
brain, are the main organs to which breast cancer
spreads. For each organ the cancer invades it needs a
specific set of genes.
The findings,
reported in the science journal Nature, are important
because if breast cancer is diagnosed and treated
early, women have a better chance of beating the
disease. After it has spread beyond the breast it is more
deadly because treatments are less effective.
Breast cancer is
one of the most common cancers in women worldwide. More
than a million new cases occur each year, according to the
International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon,
France. Some studies have shown that lesbians are at a
higher risk of breast cancer than heterosexual women.
The genes that
can be found in some primary breast tumors seem to predict
a high risk of spread to the lungs even years later. The
discovery could help doctors to identify women whose
cancer is most likely to spread to the lungs so they
can closely monitor them and try to block it or treat
it as early as possible.
Massague and his
team discovered the pattern of gene activity by studying
tumors from 82 patients whose breast cancer had spread to
the lungs. They analyzed data from a similar group of
patients from the Netherlands and found the same
genetic signature.
Massague said the
genes were not just markers for cancer spreading but
were also mediators that caused it to spread. The proteins
they produced could become prime targets for existing
or new drugs to prevent metastasis--the spread of
cancer.
"Compounds
already exist to block some of the genes we have identified
or the cell function they regulate. The next step is
to begin testing these compounds in animal models to
see if they can block metastasis," Massague
said.
If someone is
diagnosed with cancer and the tumor is found to have the
genes, doctors may be able to provide drugs preventively, or
at least have them ready for whenever the metastasis
is detected.
The scientists
believe the technique could be expanded to pinpoint genes
involved in the spread of breast cancer to other organs or
other types of cancer. "We have already
identified a set of genes that mediate metastasis to
the bone," said Massague. (Reuters, with additional
reporting by Advocate.com)