Researchers at the University of Cape Town (UCT) reported a breakthrough on Friday that could lead to early diagnosis of six common types of cancer.

Each of the cancer types — breast‚ colon‚ lung‚ kidney‚ ovarian and brain — has a unique genetic expression pattern that can be used for accurate early diagnosis and targeted treatment‚ the team has discovered.

Professor Kevin Naidoo‚ the SA Research Chair in Scientific Computing in the Department of Chemistry at UCT‚ and Dr Jahanshah Ashkani‚ also of the UCT Chemistry Department‚ made the discovery.

Naidoo is now leading a multi-laboratory collaboration that includes scientists in the divisions of pathology and human genetics at UCT’s medical campus and the Centre for Proteomics and Genomics Research to analyse the blood samples of South African patients.

They hope to develop a low-cost gene expression tool for breast cancer that will form the basis of a routinely used early diagnostic technique.

UCT spokesperson Pat Lucas said: “An early cancer diagnostic is critical for patient survival‚ as most cancers can be cured if discovered in their early stages.”

The team identified gene profiles that regulate the enzymes (GTs) responsible for modifying the structures of complex carbohydrates coating the surfaces of tumour cells.

By extracting and analysing only 210 GT genes from each of the 1‚893 full tumour genome sets (each displaying the expressions of more than 20‚000 genes) the team found patterns in the data that led to their discovery of a gene expression classification of cancer types.

“Equally impressive is that the expression patterns can identify variations within each of the cancer type‚ which can then guide specialised patient treatment‚” said Lucas.

“The use of the GT gene profile method of identifying the distinct subtypes of breast and other cancers opens the door to further research that will guide the choice of specialised treatment to significantly enhance a patient’s chances.

“This dovetails with the shift towards personalised medicine approaches that deliver specialised oncotherapy to patients following diagnosis.”

Lucas said the discovery demonstrated the importance of computational big data analytics in biomedical sciences and the developing field of personalised medicine.

“The discovery of a cancer-type carbohydrate related gene signature led the team to a genomic classification of cancer types. Their work‚ published in the current issue of Scientific Reports‚ describes the statistical analysis of 1893 patient tumour gene expression data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).

“This analysis was made possible through the use of computational big data analytics – the examination of large data sets containing a variety of data types to reveal‚ in this case‚ the hidden expression patterns of each cancer type.” — Tiso Black Star Group Digital

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