Team makes a step towards earlier diagnosis of pancreatic cancer

A multidisciplinary team from the University of Granada has developed software that can make it easier to identify potential pancreatic cancer biomarkers and thereby achieve earlier diagnosis of the disease. These biomarkers are differentially expressed genes indicative of pancreatic cancer.

However, medical professionals currently face two problems when attempting to diagnose pancreatic cancer early and efficiently. First, a patient’s genetic expression data can be collected using several platforms such as Affymetrix or Illumina, but this heterogeneous data can be hard to analyse. Second, 80 percent of patients already have locally advanced or metastatic disease at the time of diagnosis, due to the absence of reliable biomarkers that could help to detect the illness at an earlier stage. Thus, all improvements aimed at identifying new biomarkers of this illness are essential to diagnose cancer earlier and improve the prognosis of patients.

The study, led by UGR scientists Ignacio Rojas Ruiz, Octavio Caba Pérez and José Carlos Prados Salazar and published in the journal PLOS ONE, is a step toward solving these issues. The new software developed as part of the study integrates genetic data from multiple microarray platforms and sorts through them to identify specific, sensitive pancreatic cancer biomarkers.

How the software works

The sensitivity and specificity of a biomarker refers to the level of accuracy with which it predicts pancreatic cancer; the more sensitive and specific a biomarker is, the more likely it is to indicate pancreatic cancer as opposed to other illnesses. Several studies have already succeeded in establishing more specific and sensitive biomarkers, but the process of identifying them is made more complex than it could be.

The complications stem from the fact that there is currently an overwhelming number of sample preparation processes, labelling methods and microarray platforms in use, which often leads to signal values that vary greatly. This variation in turn means that potentially life-saving information gets “lost in translation.” As integrative systems like the one developed by the UGR can remedy this problem, they could become fundamental tools for ensuring earlier, more efficient diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.

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