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Blood Test May Replace Surgical Biopsies
Hospital Works On New Way To Diagnose Cancer
POSTED: 7:19 am MDT July 3,
2008
BOSTON -- Surgical biopsies to diagnose cancer, which can be painful and difficult, could someday be replaced by a simple blood test, Boston television station WCVB reported.
The station said Massachusetts General Hospital is working on a machine called the CTC scanner. Instead of surgically removing tissue, it needs only a few drops of blood.
"This really works on about a teaspoon of blood," said Dr. Daniel Haber of the hospital's cancer center.In small clinical trials on people with lung cancer, the CTC Scanner was more than 90 percent effective."We can pick up very, very rare cancer cells that normally would originate in the lung or in the breast or in other types of tissues, and we can measure them in the blood," Haber said.Doctors can keep testing during treatment to be sure it's working."What we are learning now is that cancers are not always static. They can evolve. Their genetic composition can change. Their response to particular therapies can change, so it's very important to know what you are doing and what you are treating at the time that you are treating it," Haber said.Haber and his colleagues hope to have an updated machine that can process blood samples faster within a year. FDA approval is likely years off, the station reported."The best-case scenario is that we can push the detection so that we pick up cancers earlier and earlier," Haber said.
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