LabMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News Expo Clinical Chem. Molecular Diagnostics Hematology Immunology Microbiology Pathology Technology Industry Focus

Blood Test Diagnoses Pancreatic Cancer Disease Earlier

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 29 Jan 2019
Print article
Image: Immunocytochemistry using anti- TRA-1-60 antibody (Photo courtesy of Novus Biologicals).
Image: Immunocytochemistry using anti- TRA-1-60 antibody (Photo courtesy of Novus Biologicals).
Pancreatic cancer is difficult to diagnose because it often does not have obvious early symptoms; as by the time the disease is found, it typically is quite advanced, complicating treatment and leading to poorer outcomes.

Only 8.5% of people with pancreatic cancer survive past five years, a figure that has risen just slightly since the early 1990s. A new, simple blood test has been developed that, when combined with an existing test, detects nearly 70% of pancreatic cancers with a less than 5% false-positive rate.

Scientists at the Van Andel Research Institute (Grand Rapids, MI, USA) and their colleagues collected blood samples from patients with pancreatic cancer or a benign condition involving the pancreas, and from healthy subjects. The team combined the current biomarker Carbohydrate antigen CA19-9 with a sialylated keratan sulfate proteoglycan sugar called sTRA that was measured by the new test, which is produced by a different subset of pancreatic cancers.

The team developed candidate biomarkers from sTRA and CA19-9 in a training set of 147 plasma samples and used the panels to make case/control calls, based on predetermined thresholds, in a 50-sample validation set and a blinded, 147-sample test set. The team used sandwich immunoassays utilizing antibody array methods with slight modifications. The capture antibodies were CA19-9, anti-MUC5AC, and anti-MUC16. The biotinylated primary antibodies were CA19-9 from MyBioSource or TRA-1-60.

The scientists reported that the two biomarker panels improved upon CA19-9 in the training set, one optimized for specificity, which included CA19-9 and two versions of the sTRA assay, and another optimized for sensitivity, which included two sTRA assays. Both panels achieved statistical improvement over CA19-9 in the validation set, and the specificity-optimized panel achieved statistical improvement in the blinded set: 95% specificity and 54% sensitivity (75% accuracy), compared to 97%/30% (65% accuracy). When the data was unblinded it produced further improvements and revealed independent, complementary contributions from each marker.

The authors concluded that sTRA is a validated serological biomarker of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) that yields improved performance over CA19-9. The new panels may enable surveillance for PDAC among people with elevated risk, or improved differential diagnosis among patients with suspected pancreatic cancer. Brian Haab, PhD, a professor and the study’s leading author, said, “We hope that our new test, when used in conjunction with the currently available test, will help doctors catch and treat pancreatic cancer in high-risk individuals before the disease has spread.” The study was published online on January 7, 2019, in the journal Clinical Cancer Research.

Related Links:
Van Andel Research Institute

Gold Member
Serological Pipet Controller
PIPETBOY GENIUS
Verification Panels for Assay Development & QC
Seroconversion Panels
New
Biological Indicator Vials
BI-O.K.
New
Myeloperoxidase Assay
IDK MPO ELISA

Print article

Channels

Clinical Chemistry

view channel
Image: The research team has developed the uCR-Chip device to enhance kidney function testing (Photo courtesy of University of Manitoba)

Low-Cost Portable Screening Test to Transform Kidney Disease Detection

Millions of individuals suffer from kidney disease, which often remains undiagnosed until it has reached a critical stage. This silent epidemic not only diminishes the quality of life for those affected... Read more

Microbiology

view channel
Image: The lab-in-tube assay could improve TB diagnoses in rural or resource-limited areas (Photo courtesy of Kenny Lass/Tulane University)

Handheld Device Delivers Low-Cost TB Results in Less Than One Hour

Tuberculosis (TB) remains the deadliest infectious disease globally, affecting an estimated 10 million people annually. In 2021, about 4.2 million TB cases went undiagnosed or unreported, mainly due to... Read more

Pathology

view channel
Image: The UV absorbance spectrometer being used to measure the absorbance spectra of cell culture samples (Photo courtesy of SMART CAMP)

Novel UV and Machine Learning-Aided Method Detects Microbial Contamination in Cell Cultures

Cell therapy holds great potential in treating diseases such as cancers, inflammatory conditions, and chronic degenerative disorders by manipulating or replacing cells to restore function or combat disease.... Read more

Technology

view channel
Image: Schematic illustration of the chip (Photo courtesy of Biosensors and Bioelectronics, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2025.117401)

Pain-On-A-Chip Microfluidic Device Determines Types of Chronic Pain from Blood Samples

Chronic pain is a widespread condition that remains difficult to manage, and existing clinical methods for its treatment rely largely on self-reporting, which can be subjective and especially problematic... Read more

Industry

view channel
Image: The collaboration aims to leverage Oxford Nanopore\'s sequencing platform and Cepheid\'s GeneXpert system to advance the field of sequencing for infectious diseases (Photo courtesy of Cepheid)

Cepheid and Oxford Nanopore Technologies Partner on Advancing Automated Sequencing-Based Solutions

Cepheid (Sunnyvale, CA, USA), a leading molecular diagnostics company, and Oxford Nanopore Technologies (Oxford, UK), the company behind a new generation of sequencing-based molecular analysis technologies,... Read more
Sekisui Diagnostics UK Ltd.