Researchers have revealed through a new study that a test that looks into the distinct pattern in the changing length of blood telomeres – the protective end caps on our DNA strands – hold the potential of predicting cancer many years in advance before actual diagnosis – a research that could save millions of lives annually.
Researchers say that the pattern – a rapid shortening followed by a stabilization three or four years before cancer is diagnosed – could ultimately yield a new biomarker to predict cancer development with a blood test. This is the first reported trajectory of telomere changes over the years in people developing cancer.
Scientists at have been trying to understand how blood cell telomeres, considered a marker of biological age, are affected in people who are developing cancer. But the results have been inconsistent: some studies find they are shorter, some longer and some show no correlation at all.
Why previous results were confusing
In the new study at Northwestern Medicine in collaboration with Harvard University scientists took multiple measurements of telomeres over a 13-year period in 792 persons, 135 of whom were eventually diagnosed with different types of cancer, including prostate, skin, lung, leukemia and others. [Related: 1.8m people in UK living with cancer and at least one other long-term health condition]
Initially, scientists discovered telomeres aged much faster (indicated by a more rapid loss of length) in individuals who were developing but not yet diagnosed with cancer. Telomeres in persons developing cancer looked as much as 15 years chronologically older than those of people who were not developing the disease.
But then scientists found the accelerated aging process stopped three to four years before the cancer diagnosis. [Related: New blood test could phaseout biopsies for cancer detection]
“Understanding this pattern of telomere growth may mean it can be a predictive biomarker for cancer,” said Lifang Hou, MD, PhD, the lead study author and associate professor in Preventive Medicine-Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention. “Because we saw a strong relationship in the pattern across a wide variety of cancers, with the right testing these procedures could be used to eventually diagnose a wide variety of cancers.”
Telomere length & Cancer
The Northwestern and Harvard study is believed to be the first to look at telomere length at more than one time point before diagnosis. That’s significant because cancer treatment can shorten telomeres. Post treatment, it’s uncertain whether their length has been affected by the cancer or the treatment.
“This likely explains why the previous studies have been so inconsistent,” Dr. Hou said. “We saw the inflection point at which rapid telomere shortening stabilizes. We found cancer has hijacked the telomere shortening in order to flourish in the body.”
Telomeres shorten every time a cell divides. The older you are, the more times each cell in your body has divided and the shorter your telomeres. Because cancer cells divide and grow rapidly, scientists would expect the cell would get so short it would self-destruct. But that’s not what happens, scientists discovered. Somehow, cancer finds a way to halt that process.
If scientists can identify how cancer hijacks the cell, Dr. Hou said, perhaps treatments could be developed to cause cancer cells to self-destruct without harming healthy cells. [Related: Rosehip extracts said to reduce growth of triple negative breast cancer]
The paper was published April 30 in EBioMedicine, a new journal from Elsevier in collaboration with The Lancet and Cell Press.
There’s already a test that not only predicts cancer years in advance, but also PREVENTS it (if you act soon enough). That test is a COLONOSCOPY, during which pre-cancerous “polyps” can be removed & thereby prevented from turning into bowel cancers.