Your survival post chemotherapy may depend on your genes, scientists have claimed.
An eight gene 'signature' can predict length of relapse-free survival in cancer patients after chemotherapy, according to a new research in the journal BMC Medicine.
Researchers from Academia Sinica and the National Taiwan University College of Medicine first identified genes that were involved in cellular invasion, a property of many cancer cells, using the National Cancer Institute's 60 human cancer cell line panel (NCI-60) in the US.
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"Our study found eight genes which were involved in invasion, and the relative activation of these genes correlated to chemotherapy outcome, including the receptor for growth factor EGF," Prof Ker-Chau Li, from Academia Sinica and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), said.
"We also found that some invasion genes had unique patterns of expression that reflect the differential cell responses to each of the chemotherapy agents - five drugs had the greatest effect," said Li.
When the researchers looked at gene expression data of these eight genes from cancer cell lines they found that there was an obvious difference between cells which responded to chemotherapy and those who did not.
In clinical studies, looking at lung and breast cancer, the patients, whose gene signature put them in the low-risk group, had a longer relapse free survival than the high-risk group.
"The discovery of prognostic biomarkers for chemotherapy patients remains critical toward improving the efficacy of cancer treatment.
"The eight-gene signature obtained here may help choice of treatment as part of individualised cancer therapy and our method of gene discovery may be applicable in studying other cancers," Pan-Chyr Yang of National Taiwan University said.