Synopsis: 5. medicine & health: 1. diseases: Diseases:


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A team of investigators from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) report that skin grafts from pigs lacking the Gal sugar molecule were as effective in covering burn-like injuries on the backs of baboons as skin taken from other

A key component in the treatment of major burns particularly those involving more than 30 percent of the body surface is removing the damaged skin and covering the injury preferably with a graft of a patient's own tissue.

and expensive--disadvantages also applying to artificial skin grafts--must be tested carefully for pathogens and are rejected eventually by a patient's immune system.

When Cetrulo's team used skin from these Gal-free pigs to provide grafts covering burn-like injuries on the backs of baboons--injuries made

But if a pit-to baboon was followed by a graft using baboon skin the second graft adhered to the wound

A high-quality alternative to deceased-donor skin that could be produced from a specially maintained pathogen-free herd of Galt-knockout miniature swine would be an important resource for burn management in both civilian and military settings.


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and harm fish and wildlife. This according to a first-of-its-kind study released today by scientists at Syracuse University

We know that these other pollutants contribute to increased risk of premature death and heart attacks as well as increased incidence and severity of asthma and other health effects.


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#Scientists map the worst times of day for people allergic to grass pollenatishoo! Help there are flowering grasses around please stay indoors

Traditionally people allergic to grass pollen are advised to be aware of high pollen concentrations during the day

Later in the summer allergy sufferers should avoid being outdoor in the middle of the day. Different species have different patternsconcentrations of grass pollen are influenced by many factors the most important being the weather and the emissions


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Piglets from infected sows suffered less from the infection than piglets from non-infected sows.

Overall offspring from immunised mothers had less severe diarrhea or no diarrhea at all. Piglets that became ill recovered faster

An infection with Cystoisospora suis causes serious gastrointestinal disease in piglets. The infection is continues completely asymptomatic in adult pigs explains lead author Schwarz.

Sows produce antibodies for their offspringto stimulate antibody production against Cystoisospora suis in sows researchers exposed pregnant sows to infectious stages (oocysts) of the parasite two weeks before parturition.

This leaves farmers faced with the likelihood of new infections. Sows also ingest the parasite

These maternal antibodies protect the piglets from infections in the first few weeks of life.

These immunoglobulins are not just in the bloodstream they are primarily found on the surface of the mucous membranes including the intestines where they serve as a defence against pathogens.

but we would like to use the piglet's immune response to stop it in its tracks before the infection even gets started lead author Lukas Schwarz concludes.

Infection with Cystoisospora suis results in heavy diarrhea and may cause fatalities if secondary bacterial infections are present.

For animal welfare considerations as well as for economic reasons there is considerable interest in trying to control the disease.


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#Low-carb vegan diet may reduce heart disease risk, weightresearchers at St michael's Hospital have shown for the first time that

in addition to weight loss a specific low-carbohydrate diet may also reduce the risk of heart disease by 10 per cent over 10 years.

and oils may reduce the risk of heart disease by lowering bad cholesterol. We killed two birds with one stone


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Franklin says This syndrome is aggravated by rising CO2. As more carbon becomes available to the trees the limitation of nitrogen generated by mycorrhizae becomes even more important possibly eliminating


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Cancer Journal for Clinicians. Obesity rates in the U s. have been going up for decades said University of Illinois kinesiology and community health professor Ruopeng An who led the new analysis with Roland Sturm of the RAND Corp. in Santa monica California.

University of Illinois kinesiology and community health professor Ruopeng An (pictured) and his colleague Roland Sturm of the RAND Corporation say long-term trends can help better understand the obesity epidemic in the U s. Photo by L

A common misbelief is that the obesity epidemic reflects increasing social disparities and that the largest weight gains are concentrated in groups identifiable by race ethnicity income education

So a reversal of the obesity epidemic would need universal intuitions rather than a focus on certain groups.

So we are kind of in a dilemma trying to figure out what really contributes to the obesity epidemic.


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#Healthy diet linked with better lung function in COPD patientssure everyone knows a healthy diet provides lots of health benefits for patients with respiratory diseases

but now a new study has shown a direct link between eating fish fruit and dairy products and improved lung function among patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

or cheese had showed improvement in lung function less emphysema improved six-minute walk scores improved SGRQ scores


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oils--canola soybean and corn--to the rising incidence of lung inflammation and possibly asthma.

as a result of their high gamma-tocopherol consumption said senior author Joan Cook-Mills an associate professor of medicine in allergy/immunology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of medicine.

Rates of asthma in the U s. have been climbing in the last 40 years coinciding with a switch in U s. diets from lard

which were thought to be healthier for the heart Looking at other countries'rates of asthma Cook-Mills said those with significantly lower rates of asthma have diets high in olive and sunflower oils.

In the U s. asthma prevalence (the percentage of people who have been diagnosed with asthma and still have asthma) was 8. 4 percent in 2010 as reported by the U s. Department of health and human services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In the U s. the average blood plasma level of gamma-tocopherol is four or more times higher than those of European and Scandinavian countries that consume sunflower and olive oil Cook-Mills noted.

and sunflower oil have the lowest rate of asthma and those that consume soybean corn and canola oil have the highest rate of asthma Cook-Mills said.

When people consume alpha-tocopherol which is rich in olive oil and sunflower oil their lung function is better.

Cook-Mills had done previous allergy research in mice showing alpha-tocopherol decreased lung inflammation protecting healthy lung function and gamma-tocopherol increased lung

inflammation and airway hyperresponsiveness a characteristic of asthma. She hypothesized that they might have similar effects in humans.

People with asthma already have lower lung function so if they have high gamma-tocopherol levels they would have even more difficulty breathing Cook-Mills said.

The individuals in CARDIA with asthma and high gamma-tocopherol had the lowest lung function.


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The success with kidney transplant patients is given particularly noteworthy the number of very ill people who come to the medical center with a high probability of rejecting a donor organ because of high amounts of antibodies in their blood.


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which aids public health--a natural goal for hospitals to have said Sites. Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by Ohio State university.


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The research supported by the National Cancer Institute examined the sequence of events around which university students first smoke tobacco from a hookah also known as a water pipe in an effort to determine the driving factors behind the decision.

This suggests that countering positive attitudes may be at least as effective as emphasizing harm in preventing initiation of hookah tobacco smoking.


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One idea about the current obesity epidemic is that appetite suppression systems that evolved to work with a paleo diet are off-kilter today.


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and drinking water contributes to a number of human illnesses and can affect ecosystems negatively. That could be given a problem the high biodiversity of tropical rain forests and their important role in the global carbon cycle and the Earth's climate.


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and lettuce can protect you from hypertension suggests a new study led by King's college London. The findings published in the journal PNAS help to explain why some previous studies have shown that a Mediterranean diet can reduce blood pressure.

Mice genetically engineered to be resistant to this inhibitory process were found to maintain their high blood pressure

or nuts can reduce the incidence of cardiovascular problems like stroke heart failure and heart attacks. Story Source:


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#Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: Promising drug therapies for fatal lung disease foundresearchers in separate clinical trials found two drugs slow the progression of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis a fatal lung disease

with no effective treatment or cure and for which there is currently no therapy approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

and in 2011 was approved by the European union for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. The findings of the ASCEND drug trial are published online by the New england Journal of Medicine

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis causes the regions of the lungs where oxygen gets to the blood to thicken

Noble also was a co-author of a second study testing the efficacy and safety of the multi-kinase inhibitor nintedanib on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis patients.

Nintedanib is also is being studied in lung cancer. In our research we found that nintedanib could also slow the loss of lung function in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis said Noble.

It is a second dose of good news for our patients because nintedanib not only slowed the progression of the disease

Cedars--Sinai was not among the medical centers participating in this multicenter study of the drug's efficacy in treating idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.


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and effects of cardiovascular disease and may have other health benefits. While omega-6 fatty acids--found in some vegetable oils as well as nuts

This has led to the somewhat controversial hypothesis that the omega-6/omega-3 ratio is an important contributor to the risk of cardiovascular disease cancer and inflammatory disorders.

One type of animal that naturally produces all fatty acids is the c. elegans roundworm and in 2004 Kang's group reported that mice transgenic for a c. elegans gene called fat-1 converted omega-6s into omega-3s in their tissues.


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#Wide variation in lung cancer rates globally, study findsthe only recent comprehensive analysis of lung cancer rates for women around the world finds lung cancer rates are dropping in young women in many regions

or expand comprehensive tobacco control programs across the globe to curtail future tobacco-related lung cancer deaths.

The study is published early online in Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention. Lung cancer is now the second leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide.

An estimated 491200 women died of lung cancer in 2012 more than half (57%)of whom resided in economically developing countries.

Differences in smoking patterns account for much of the variation in lung cancer rates around the globe.

Smoking in females became common in North america Northern europe Australia and New zealand as early as the 1940s but remained rare throughout the 20th century in the developing world and in places with strong social norms against it such as the Middle east.

Because the tobacco epidemic among women has varied globally researchers led by Lindsey Torre documented and compared contemporary trends in lung cancer mortality to identify opportunities for intervention.

They used the World health organization's Cancer Mortality Database covering populations on 10 six continents to calculate age-standardized lung cancer death rates during 2006 to 2010 and annual percent change in rates for available

years from 1985 to 2011 and for the most recent five years for which data is available by population and age group (30-49 and 50-74 years).

Lung cancer mortality rates among young women (30-49 years) were stable or declining in 47 of the 52 populations examined.

Lung cancer mortality rates (per 100000) during 2006-2010 ranged from 0. 7 in Costa rica to 14.8 in Hungary among young women and from 8. 8 in Georgia to 120.0 in Scotland among older women.

The widespread reduction in lung cancer we found in young women in many parts of the globe is encouraging

The greatest opportunity we have right now for slowing a tobacco-fueled epidemic is in those countries where smoking among women is rare such as Africa and most of Asia.

And while decreasing lung cancer death rates are encouraging many countries have yet to implement the kinds of comprehensive tobacco control measures that have led to drops in other countries.

The above story is provided based on materials by American Cancer Society. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


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The research team showed that the microbial combinations present in traditional cheeses were able to to protect them--both in the paste and on the surface--from dangerous pathogens notably Listeria monocytogenes.

and ripen certain raw milk cheeses also appeared to be protected by a complex microbial biofilm limiting contamination by redoubtable pathogens such as Salmonella Listeria monocytogenes Escherichia coli o157/H7 and Staphylococcus aureus.

Nevertheless studies performed on raw milk have demonstrated that its consumption can protect against allergies asthma hay fever and more generally atopic sensitisation.


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Concerned hunters and foresters sent the carcasses to the University of Veterinary medicine Vienna for analysis. Extensive investigations have revealed now that the animals died of bacterial pneumonia caused by two strains of bacteria that are highly unusual in chamois.

The Pathological Laboratory at the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology specializes in such cases. Severe pneumonia as cause of deathnineteen dead chamois from the region of Amstetten Lilienfeld and Salzburg in north-central Austria were investigated.

The researchers performed autopsies investigating various tissues and testing for the presence of bacteria viruses and parasites.

The analysis revealed that the animals had died of a massive pneumonia. The causes of the pneumonia turned out to be bacteria with the evocative names Mannheimia glucosida (in honour of the German biologist Walter Mannheim nothing to do with the German town) and Bibersteinia trehalosi.

The bacteria had previously been detected only in cattle and sheep. That they can cause deadly and epidemic pneumonia in chamois was unknown.

It is against the law to administer medical treatment to wild animals so we don't really have many possibilities to prevent an epidemic explains Annika Posautz from the pathology team of the Research Institute.

All we can do is try to minimize contact between animals for example by avoiding the use of salt licks.

This puts farm animals as well as wildlife population at risk for interspecies transmission of infections. Close cooperation with hunters and foresters is essential to ensure that any outbreaks are detected as soon as possible.


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#Water pipe smoking causes significant exposure to nicotine, cancer-causing agentsyoung adults who smoked water pipes in hookah bars had elevated levels of nicotine cotinine tobacco-related cancer-causing agents

and volatile organic compounds (VOC) in their urine and this may increase their risk for cancer

and other chronic diseases according to a study published in Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

twofold increase in NNAL a breakdown product of a tobacco-specific nitrosamine NNK which can cause lung and pancreatic cancers;

and acrolein that are known to cause cancer and cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. There was also a substantial increase in nicotine levels

The above story is provided based on materials by American Association for Cancer Research (AACR. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length h


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Donahue and an international team of researchers with the CLOUD experiment at CERN set out to test that hypothesis. The CLOUD project at CERN is a unique facility that allows scientists to reproduce a typical atmospheric setting inside of an essentially contaminant-free


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This in turn affected the plant's wounding response and made it more susceptible to pest injury.


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Chemical compounds containing reactive nitrogen are major drivers of air and water pollution worldwide and hence of diseases like asthma or cancer.


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The role of root infection by insect-carried bacterial pathogens has been underestimated greatly said Evan Johnson a research assistant scientist with UF's Institute of food and agricultural sciences.


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#Link between insecticides and collapse of honey bee colonies strengthenedtwo widely used neonicotinoids--a class of insecticide--appear to significantly harm honey bee colonies over the winter particularly during colder winters according to a new study

or parasites as a result of exposure to pesticides the new study found that bees in the hives exhibiting CCD had almost identical levels of pathogen infestation as a group of control hives most

Experts have considered a number of possible causes including pathogen infestation beekeeping practices and pesticide exposure.


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and by type of stroke caused by clot or bleeding). Researchers found no significant difference in the effect on age (younger or older than 55.

In the United states stroke is the No. 4 cause of death and a leading cause of disability.


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Novel lung cancer treatment meets with successan old idea of retreating lung tumors with radiation is new again especially with the technological advances seen in radiation oncology over the last decade.

The Comprehensive Cancer Center of Wake Forest Baptist Medical center is one of only a handful of cancer centers that is attempting to give lung cancer patients out of treatment options a chance to keep the cancer at bay.

and Oncology and the Journal of Thoracic Oncology outline the treatment success at Wake Forest Baptist. â#oeone of the toughest challenges of lung cancer is

when the cancer comes back in an area thatâ##s been treated previously with radiation treatmentâ#said James J. Urbanic M d. lead author of the studies

and with a high enough dose to knock the cancer back? â#Urbanic said the overall findings of the study suggest that there are some patients with recurrent lung cancers who can be treated with another definitive course of radiation therapy

and still have a chance at a cure. â#oeat many cancer treatment centers these patients only get chemotherapy

and have no chance at definitive treatment. The goal of treatment is solely to prevent

and the majority of patients (88 percent) were treated for primary lung cancer. Average tumor size at retreatment was 2. 5 cm.

Prior lung resections had been completed in 24 percent of patients. Urbanic said the typical patient is an older man

and radiation or radiation alone for a lung cancer that couldnâ##t be removed surgically. Theyâ##ve returned for a checkup

and feel well but a CT scan shows that the cancer has returned in the area previously treated.

If the cancer is just in one spot the patients get retreated with 10 radiation treatments done with the SBRT technique

which is targeted tightly to just the tumor and minimizes the dose to the surrounding normal tissue. â#oewake Forest Baptist has been developing expertise in doing thisâ#Urbanic said. â#oeweâ##re finding that there are patients who are alive years later.

#But there is a higher risk of injury involved when someone is radiated a second time which is why other cancer treatment center programs might be reluctant to adopt the practice he said. â#oethis is a fairly niche effort in lung cancer care

and weâ##d like to see a national level clinical trial at some pointâ#he said. â#oethe technology has gotten to the point where


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and illnesses transmitted by food water and disease carriers such as mosquitoes and ticks. Some of these health impacts are already underway in the United states. Climate change will absent other changes amplify some of the existing health threats the Nation now faces.

and can help reduce the harm to wildlife natural assets and human well-being that climate disruption might cause.

Warmer waters harm coral reefs and alter the distribution abundance and productivity of many marine species. The rising temperature and changing chemistry of ocean water combine with other stresses such as overfishing and coastal and marine pollution to alter marine-based food production

and harm fishing communitiesâ#In response to observed and projected climate impacts some existing ocean policies practices


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A new study from Northwestern Medicineâ and Northeastern Illinois University found that the majority of college students are engaging in unhealthy behaviors that could increase their risk of cancer later on.

or more days of vigorous exercise for at least 20 minutes or five or more days of moderate exercise for at least 30 minutes a week Changing unhealthy behaviors in college students now could be a way to reduce the risk of cancer as well as other

Hitsman is an assistant professor in preventive medicine-behavioral medicine and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of medicine and a member of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University.

Published online May 5 in the journal Preventive medicine the study is the first to evaluate cancer risk behaviors

Understanding cancer risk behavior clustering by race and ethnicity is given critical that the number of new cases is projected to increase by 45 percent by 2030

and surpass heart disease as the leading causes of death in the United states. American Society of Clinical Oncology 2014.

The state of cancer care in America 2014: a report by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

If left unaddressed in college students there is potential for cancer rates to escalate even higher. There are major cancer disparities both in terms of risk morbidity

and mortality with racial and ethnic minorities in the United states Hitsman said. In this study we see some of these behavioral risk factors already starting in young adulthood.

Future research should monitor the persistence of cancer risk behavior clustering by race and ethnicity.


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and Elli Slaughter advocate to curb the environmental harm done through the large-scale littering of cigarette butts packaging and matches.

It is not only the cigarette ingredients that harm the environment but also the materials they are made of.

The researchers call filtered cigarettes a farce in terms of consumer safety with a recent National Cancer Institute review showing that these are not healthier


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and the Cancer Coalition of South Georgia sought to examine the home food environment and determine which aspects are associated with healthy eating in low-income overweight and obese women who receive healthcare through local federally-qualified community health centers.


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#Factors leading to diabetes may contribute to milk supply problems for new mothersnew studies provide fresh evidence that the same factors that lead to diabetes contribute to low milk supply in some new mothers.

The study found that women diagnosed with low milk supply were 2. 5 times more likely to have experienced gestational diabetes compared to women seen at the clinic solely

also affects lactation sufficiency--even among women who did not experience diabetes in pregnancy. She found that elevated body mass index elevated fasting insulin insulin resistance

and especially elevated fasting plasma glucose in the pre-diabetic range were all predictors of insufficient milk supply in women attempting to exclusively breastfeed.

However one consequence of the obesity epidemic is that nearly one out of every four reproductive-aged women is pre-diabetic.

Dr. Nommsen-Rivers and Dr. Riddle are planning to conduct a clinical trial of metformin a drug used to control blood sugar in type 2 diabetes.

whether metformin by improving insulin action in the mammary gland will boost milk production in pre-diabetic mothers diagnosed with low milk supply.


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and often infected by fleas with plague bacteria Knutie says. Permethrin has been sprayed in burrows but that is labor-intensive so it might be used on vegetation the animals drag into their burrows.

Knutie says permethrin-treated cotton has been used in the Northeast to get mice to incorporate it in their nests to kill Lyme disease-carrying ticks.


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When applied to Salmonella-contaminated tomato plants in a field study the bacterium known as Paenibacillus alvei significantly reduced the concentration of the pathogen compared to controls.

Since the millennium this pathogen has caused 12 multistate outbreaks of food-borne illness--more than one each year.

This bacterium also has known no history of human pathology making it a great candidate as a biological control agent says Zheng.

While farmers and agricultural scientists have used long microbes to prevent plant diseases we now have the opportunity to add a naturally-occurring microbe to a crop in the field with the goal of preventing human disease says Zheng.


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#Glutamine ratio is key ovarian cancer indicatora Rice university-led analysis of the metabolic profiles of hundreds of ovarian tumors has revealed a new test to determine

The study also suggests how ovarian cancer treatments can be tailored based on the metabolic profile of a particular tumor.

The research which appears online this week in Molecular Systems Biology was conducted at the Texas Medical center in Houston by researchers from Rice the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Baylor College of Medicine.

and highly aggressive ovarian tumor cells particularly with respect to their production and use of the amino acid glutamine said lead researcher Deepak Nagrath of Rice.

The research is part of a growing effort among cancer researchers worldwide to create treatments that target the altered metabolism of cancer cells.

and researchers long believed that all cancers behaved in this way. Intense research in recent decades has revealed a more nuanced picture.

Each type of cancer appears to have its own metabolic signature Nagrath said. For instance kidney cancer does not rely on glutamine

and though breast cancer gets some of its energy from glutamine it gets even more from glycolysis.

For other cancers including glioblastoma and pancreatic cancer glutamine appears to be the primary energy source.

Nagrath director of Rice's Laboratory for Systems Biology of Human Diseases said the new metabolic analysis indicates that ovarian cancer may be susceptible to multidrug cocktails particularly

if the amounts of the drugs can be tailored to match the metabolic profile of a patient's tumor.

The research also revealed a specific biochemical test that pathologists could use to guide such treatments.

The test involves measuring the ratio between the amount of glutamine that a cell takes up from outside

A high ratio was correlated directly to tumor aggression and metastatic capability. Patients with this profile had the worst prognosis for survival.

The three-year study included cell culture studies at Rice as well as a detailed analysis of gene expression profiles of more than 500 patients from the Cancer Genome Atlas and protein-expression profiles from about 200

Nagrath said the study also revealed another key finding--a direct relationship between glutamine and an ovarian cancer biomarker called STAT3.

and signaling is vital to developing novel strategies to tackle cancer said MD Anderson co-author Prahlad Ram associate professor of systems biology and co-director of the MD Anderson Cancer Center's Systems Biology

STAT3 is the primary marker that is used today to ascertain malignancy tumor aggression and metastasis in ovarian cancer.

Nagrath said The higher STAT3 is the more aggressive the cancer. For the first time we were able to show how glutamine regulates STAT3 expression through a well-known metabolic pathway called the TCA cycle

Ultimately he hopes the investigations will lead to new treatment regimens for cancer as well as a better understanding of the role of cancer-cell metabolism in metastasis and drug resistance.


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