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Gene 'signature' may predict
breast cancer relapse
London -
Scientists have discovered a genetic marker that may predict which
breast cancer patients are at high risk of recurrence, potentially
saving many women from undergoing unnecessary chemotherapy.
Between 60 and 70 percent of women
with breast cancer that has not spread to the lymph nodes are cured by
local surgery or radiotherapy. But 85-90 percent of them still receive
additional chemotherapy because doctors fear their cancer will recur.
John Foekens and colleagues from
Erasmus MC Rotterdam, Netherlands, said on Friday they had found
patterns of gene expressions across 76 genes which could successfully
predict relapse.
The discovery, which was reported in
the Lancet medical journal, might allow clinicians to avoid
unnecessary treatment or choose less aggressive therapies in future.
However, Tor-Kristian Jenssen, from
database organization PubGene in Norway, sounded a note of caution,
since other researchers had identified gene "signatures" relating to
different genes in the past.
Although the latest study was the
largest of its type, it might still be too small to provide a final
selection of the right genes for analysis, Jenssen wrote in an
accompanying commentary. -- Reuters News
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