Wed Dec 15, 2004
Health - Reuters
By Deena Beasley
Saliva can be used to diagnose whether someone has
oral cancer and may also be a reliable indicator of
other cancers and diseases, researchers said on
Wednesday.
The research, carried
out at the University of California at Los Angeles,
provided the first proof that RNA biomarkers in
saliva can be used to inexpensively detect cancer,
said Dr. David Wong, study author and chairman of
oral biology and medicine at the university.
The exploratory study,
published in Clinical Cancer Research, showed that
oral cancer was identified in nine out of 10 cancer
patients.
Saliva is already used
to diagnose certain diseases, including HIV, which is
detected from protein antibodies.
"This is a new
direction, using a non-invasive fluid to look for
disease signatures, particularly in cancer," Wong
said, adding that new technology to rapidly analyze
genes made this possible.
His team worked
backward from saliva samples taken from patients with
oral cancer to identify a combination of four RNA
biomarkers, out of the 3,000 found in saliva, that
provided a detectable signature for head and neck
cancer -- cancers of the mouth, tongue, larynx and
pharynx.
RNA is the information
carrier for genetic material. While DNA contains the
instructions for producing proteins, RNA molecules
carry the instructions into the cell's machinery.
The UCLA study, funded
by the National Institutes of Health, involved 32
patients with head and neck cancers and 32 age and
gender matched subjects who were cancer-free but had
the same smoking history.
Using their saliva,
researchers were able to discriminate the cancer
patients from the control group, with a 91 percent
accuracy rate.
Wong said that success
rate had since inched up to 98 percent and a larger
oral cancer study had been launched.