Cancer

Diagnosing breast cancer with a pill that makes tumors glow

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Researchers at University of Michigan have developed a pill that can help in the diagnosis of breast cancer by making tumors glow under infrared light
University of Michigan
The new technique would allow doctors to pinpoint tumors in breast tissue easily and non-invasively
Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering
To image breast cancer, the team used a molecule from a failed drug that binds to tumors but doesn't do anything, and attached another molecule that fluoresces under infrared light
Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering
Researchers at University of Michigan have developed a pill that can help in the diagnosis of breast cancer by making tumors glow under infrared light
University of Michigan
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Mammograms are useful tools for diagnosing breast cancer, but they don't always get it right. It's not always easy to tell how dangerous a particular tumor is, meaning harmful but treatable cancers can be missed, while other patients with benign tumors undergo unnecessary invasive procedures. Now, scientists at the University of Michigan have developed a new diagnostic tool that's much easier to swallow – a pill that makes tumors glow under infrared light.

To take imaging down to the molecular level, the researchers designed an oral pill that can deliver a fluorescent dye to tumors in breast tissue. Once there, doctors can perform an infrared scan on the breast, and the dye will cause cancerous cells to reflect the light.

It may sound simple, but the researchers say it was a challenge to find the right molecules for the job. They needed to be small and lipophilic (greasy) enough to be absorbed into the bloodstream, but large and water-soluble enough to show up in a scan. The dream molecule turned up in a failed cancer-fighting drug, which was found to successfully bind to tumors but then not do any actual cancer-fighting.

The new technique would allow doctors to pinpoint tumors in breast tissue easily and non-invasively
Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering

But that was enough for a diagnostic tool. The U-M team tuned the molecule to only bind to proteins on the surface of malignant cancer cells, and attached a fluorescent molecule to the targeting one. That way, patients can take a pill, then doctors perform an infrared scan on their breasts and check if anything's glowing. Tests on mice showed that the technique works.

The researchers say that this new method is less invasive than a mammogram, and more precise. That said, mammography will still have its place, but doctors will be able to make more efficient use of the technique. Being able to better distinguish between benign and malignant cancers will benefit all patients; those with tumors that don't pose a threat to their health can be spared the discomfort and cost of chemotherapy or surgery, while patients who do need those procedures will enjoy shorter waiting lists.

To image breast cancer, the team used a molecule from a failed drug that binds to tumors but doesn't do anything, and attached another molecule that fluoresces under infrared light
Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering

"We overspend US$4 billion per year on the diagnosis and treatment of cancers that women would never die from," says Greg Thurber, lead researcher on the study. "If we go to molecular imaging, we can see which tumors need to be treated."

As an added bonus, infrared scans are safe, without the risks of X-rays used in a mammogram.

The research was published in the journal Molecular Pharmaceutics, and the team describes the work in the video below.

Source: University of Michigan

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1 comment
amazed W1
Can the technique be used on the two serious cancers afflicting males, i.e. testicular and prostate? Or indeed even on other cancers afflicting females.