Much effort has gone into developing fluid biopsies of patient peripheral blood for the monitoring of metastatic cancers. One common approach is to isolate and analyze tumor cells in the peripheral blood. Widespread clinical implementation of this approach has been hindered by the current choice of targeting epithelial markers known to be highly variable in primary tumor sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecommendations for lung cancer screening present a tangible opportunity to integrate predictive blood-based assays with radiographic imaging. This study compares performance of autoantibody markers from prior discovery in sample cohorts from two CT screening trials. One-hundred eighty non-cancer and 6 prevalence and 44 incidence cancer cases detected in the Mayo Lung Screening Trial were tested using a panel of six autoantibody markers to define a normal range and assign cutoff values for class prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Cancer immunotherapy is a conceptually attractive since it is highly specific and can deal with disseminated disease with minimal impact on normal tissues. Early phase clinical trials have well established the ability of a variety of immunotherapeutic approaches to induce antigen specific immune responses in lung cancer patients. Although no immunotherapy is likely to be a panacea, recent data from randomized phase IIB studies offer promise of therapeutic activity in both early and late stage lung cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutoantibody profiling is a developing approach that incorporates immune recognition of myriad aberrant cancer proteins into a single diagnostic assay. We have previously described methodology to screen T7-phage NSCLC-cDNA libraries for phage-expressed proteins recognized by NSCLC-associated antibodies, and developed a multiplex assay that has excellent ability to discriminate NSCLC from control samples. This follow-up report describes the development and testing of a diagnostic autoantibody assay that uses seven amino-acid peptides as capture proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe current study characterized peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from leukapheresis products of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for cytokine release, the ability to incorporate tritiated thymidine following stimulation using PHA as well as the levels of both CD4 and CD8 regulatory T cells (Tregs) as defined by FoxP3 expression. Results were compared to normal donor PBMC obtained from buffy coat products. Heterogeneous levels of Th1 (gamma interferon and IL-2), Th2 (IL-10 and IL-13), pro-inflammatory (TNF-alpha and IL-6) and the hematopoietic inducing cytokine GMCSF were detected from both populations of PBMC as measured using ELISA.
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