Innovation America Innovation America Accelerating the growth of the GLOBAL entrepreneurial innovation economy
Founded by Rich Bendis

Transplanting tumors: When cancer cells from a breast cancer patient are implanted into a mouse, the cells quickly grow and spread. In this image, the pink cells are human tumor cells, while the purple cells are from the mouse. Researchers are using this technique to study the progression of human cancers. Credit: Richard Wilson Scientists have identified genetic clues to how a tumor spreads throughout the body. Understanding the genetic aberrations that enable the metastasis of cancers could help scientists design better prognostic tests and more effective treatments.

In the research, the scientists compared the genome sequence of a breast cancer patient with that of both her primary tumor and cancer cells that had spread to her brain. It is just one of two published papers comparing the genomic differences between a primary and metastatic tumor from the same patient, a challenging endeavor but one that allows scientists to track the cancer's evolution. "A patient's tumor is a living thing changing all the time," says Matthew Ellis, an oncologist and scientist at Washington University, in St. Louis, and one of the study's authors. "We've never been able to track that completely."

Cancer results when healthy cells acquire a combination of genetic mutations that allow them to grow out of control. Scientists have identified a number of mutations that increase the risk of cancer, as well as predict its prognosis and its likelihood of responding to certain treatments. But much less is known about the genetic mistakes that enable tumor progression, especially metastasis. The new research, reported Wednesday in the journal Nature, "emphasizes that you can gain a lot from looking at the evolution of a cancer over time," says Sam Aparicio, Canada Research Chair in molecular oncology, who was not involved in the study.

To read the full, original article click on this link: Technology Review: Genetic Clues to Cancer's Spread

Author: Emily Singer