Futurity

Gene indicates whose prostate cancer will spread

Doctors can determine how advanced prostate cancer is, but not if it will spread. A new discovery changes that.
man in gown sits on hospital bed facing away

Scientists have discovered a gene in cancerous prostate tumors that indicates when someone is at high risk of their cancer spreading.

“Currently, when a patient is diagnosed with prostate cancer, physicians can determine how advanced a tumor is but not whether the patients’ cancer will spread,” says Antonina Mitrofanova, an assistant professor at Rutgers School of Health Professions and a research member of Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey.

“If we can determine whether a patient’s cancer is likely to spread at the time of diagnosis, we can start them on a targeted treatment plan as soon as possible to decrease the likelihood of their cancer spreading.”

The researchers identified the NSD2 gene using a computer algorithm developed to determine which cancer genes that spread in a mouse model are most relevant to humans. When they turned the gene off in mice tumor cells, it significantly reduced the cancer’s spread.

Mitrofanova and collaborators are researching a potential drug to target NSD2, but encourage doctors to use NSD2 screening so they can start high-risk patients on anti-metastatic treatment as soon as possible.

While the algorithm focused on prostate cancer, Mitrofanova says researchers can apply it more broadly to study other cancers.

Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in American men and the second leading cause of cancer deaths, according to the American Cancer Society.

The study appears in Nature Communications.

Source: Rutgers University

The post Gene indicates whose prostate cancer will spread appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Birth Mother’s Trauma Can Still Affect Kids Adopted As Newborns
Researchers have discovered a link between birth mothers who experienced stressful childhood events and their own children’s behavior problem. The finding held true even though the children were adopted as newborns, raised by their adoptive parents,
Futurity3 min read
Young Heavy Drinkers Cut Alcohol Use During Pandemic
A new study finds heavy-drinking young adults decreased alcohol intake during the pandemic. The researchers found alcohol use and alcohol-related problems substantially decreased in heavy-drinking young adults during the pandemic, and these decreases
Futurity4 min read
How Plants Shape Earth’s Climate
Plants are not simply victims of circumstances, but have helped to shape climate conditions on Earth, researchers report. Over the course of hundreds of millions of years, Earth has lived through a series of climatic shifts, shaping the planet as we

Related