Quantitative ELISA Stool Test Screens for Colorectal Cancer

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 06 Jan 2015
A novel screening immunochromatographic kit has been evaluated for usefulness in detecting colorectal cancer (CRC) and colonic adenoma by comparing it with other tests.

The M2 pyruvate kinase (M2-PK) is an isoenzyme of pyruvate kinase mainly produced in undifferentiated and proliferating tissues and in cancer cells and M2-PK regulates the synthetic balance between adenosine triphosphate and macromolecules.

Image: An immunochromatographic fecal occult blood test (iFOBT), the Asan Easy Test FOB (Photo courtesy of Asan Pharm Co Ltd.).

Scientists at the Catholic University of Korea (Seoul, Korea) and their colleagues investigated the enzymatic biomarker M2-PK with volunteers in patient groups with 139 cases of colorectal cancer and 124 with adenoma, along with a population-based control group of 60 people, making a total of 323 subjects. The stool samples were collected from subjects awaiting surgery, out-patients and patients of health promotion clinics. All stool samples were collected before oral colonoscopy preparation administration and some were tested immediately, while others were stored at -20 °C.

An immunochromatographic fecal occult blood test (iFOBT), the Asan Easy Test FOB (Asan Biotech Institute, Seoul, Korea) was compared with the immunochromatographic fecal tumor M2-PK test (iM2-PK, M2-PK Quick; ScheBo Biotech AG, Giessen, Germany) and the enzyme-linked immunoassay kit Tumor M2-PKTM ELISA Stool Test also manufactured by ScheBo Biotech AG.

The sensitivity of the M2-PK test was 92.8% for colorectal cancer and 69.4% for adenomas. In addition, they also compared the results of the M2-PK test with those of an immunological fecal occult blood test (iFOBT). This was clearly inferior to the M2-PK test. The iFOBT detected only 47.5% of the colon cancers and just 12.1% of the adenomas. Consequently, the M2-PK test detected twice as many colorectal cancer cases and nearly six times the number of adenomas than the immunological fecal occult blood test (iFOBT).

The iM2-PK is an immunochromatographic qualitative method for fecal tumor M2-PK. This test is performed in about 15 minutes and the cost is about half of the fecal tumor M2-PK ELISA test. The main advantage of the iM2-PK is that it is quickly performed with fresh stool samples in clinics without being sent to a laboratory. The sensitivity of the iM2-PK was superior to that of the fecal tumor M2-PK ELISA test. The authors concluded that the iM2-PK may be a reliable and acceptable screening method for CRC. The study was published on December 5, 2014, in the journal Gut and Liver.

Related Links:

Catholic University of Korea
Asan Biotech Institute 
ScheBo Biotech AG 



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