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February 11, 2009 - Also appeared in print Feb. 16, 2009, p. 8
Diagnostics
Biomarker For Cancer Aggression
Metabolite in urine is linked to prostate cancer's progress
Rachel Petkewich
A metabolite biomarker found in the urine of patients with prostate cancer may indicate how aggressively the disease is advancing, according to new research (Nature 2009, 457, 910). The findings also indicate that sarcosine, a methylated derivative of the amino acid glycine, may play a role in the cancer???s biological pathway.
Prostate cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer in men. Traditional diagnosis relies on a digital rectal exam, blood levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA), and tumor biopsies. None of these techniques can consistently distinguish aggressive from slow-growing cancer, which means physicians often end up over-treating patients, says the research team's leader, Arul M. Chinnaiyan at the University of Michigan Medical School. Sarcosine could point the way to more reliable and less invasive diagnostic methods as well as potential therapeutic agents, he adds.
Using chromatographic separations and mass spectrometry, Chinnaiyan and colleagues profiled 1,126 metabolites found in tissue, blood, and urine. They found that men with prostate cancer had high levels of sarcosine in their urine. The team also discovered that sarcosine may be involved in the development of prostate cancer. When they added the small molecule to cultures of benign prostate cells, the cells became invasive.
A biomarker linking tumor aggression and invasiveness is potentially significant for better understanding prostate cancer, says biological chemist Jeremy Nicholson at Imperial College London. But it is rare for just one biomarker to be absolutely diagnostic for any condition, he adds.
Assessing metabolites in urine might be an appropriate tool when applied with measurement of PSA levels and other approaches to monitor disease progression, write prostate cancer researchers Cory Abate-Shen and Michael M. Shen of the Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons in a related commentary.
C. Shad Thaxton, who studies prostate cancer at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, says the new work is "intriguing and certainly has the potential of leading to novel diagnostics and treatments for prostate cancer," however, more work is needed to validate sarcosine as a marker for prostate cancer.
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