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Latest Updates From The Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)
Alzheimer imaging aficionados thronged to back-to-back meetings held recently in Seattle for a preview of the latest data from the Alzheimer"s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). Launched in the fall of 2004 and set to conclude next year, the $64-million ADNI is comparing imaging methods and fluid biomarkers in the same set of people to determine which measures can best predict and track Alzheimer-disease clinical changes over time. The project is approaching the homestretch of data collection. By the fall of 2010, ADNI scientists will have collected three years of longitudinal data from more than 800 participants (about 200 normal, 400 with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and 200 with Alzheimer disease) at 59 U.S. and Canadian sites. The Seattle meetings featured preliminary analysis of the one-year data.
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Evaluating More Lymph Nodes May Not Improve Identification Of Late-Stage Colorectal Cancer
Surgically removing and evaluating an increasing number of lymph nodes does not appear to identify a greater number of patients with stage III colorectal cancer, according to a report in the July issue of Archives of Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
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Scientists Discover A Fundamental Mechanism For Cell Organization
Scientists have discovered that cells use a very simple phase transition -- similar to water vapor condensing into dew -- to assemble and localize subcellular structures that are involved in formation of the embryo.
Oncology

Potential Shown In Breast Cancer Biomarker

SCIENTISTS have found a new biomarker that can predict the outcome of breast cancers that have spread to the lymph nodes, reveal findings published in the British Journal of Cancer . Scientists from the Renç© Gauducheau Cancer Centre in France took samples from 92 women who had surgery for lymph node positive breast cancer - where cancer cells had spread to the armpit area - and compared the amount of a protein called UBE2C with the outcome of the patients over a five year period. They found that high levels of the protein were linked to a more aggressive tumour. It is hoped that the protein UBE2C could be developed into a test to help doctors predict what treatment works best for women with this form of breast cancer and enable scientists to identify drugs to target the protein. Dr Pascal Jç©zç©quel, who led the study from the Renç© Gauducheau Cancer Centre said: "Previous studies have alerted us to the presence of UBE2C in certain particularly aggressive cancers, so we wanted to understand how reliable an indication high levels of the UBE2C protein was in predicting the likelihood of the cancer returning after treatment. "This study shows that the protein gives us a very reliable indication of the aggressiveness of disease." Dr Jç©zç©quel continued: "The UBE2C protein appears to be linked to a process called the proteasome system, which when it goes wrong, can drive this type of cancer. So, we believe that the chemotherapy drug bortezomib (Velcade), which is designed to block proteasome activity, could work against this form of the disease. "If this is shown to work in clinical trials, it could open the door to more effective treatments for a group of patients who are served less well by existing therapies." Dr Lesley Walker, director of cancer information at Cancer Research UK, said: "We no longer see people with breast cancer as belonging to a single group because we now know there are many different forms of the disease. Personalising treatments in this way enables doctors to decide what treatment is likely to have the best effect to improve survival and avoid unnecessary treatment. "The next stage will be to see if this protein can be used as a predictive biomarker by doctors to decide how best to treat this group of patients and to see how useful it will be." References Validation of UBE2C protein as a prognostic marker in node-positive breast cancer Loussouarn, D., Campion, L., Leclair, F., Campone, M., Charbonnel, C., Ricolleau, G., Gouraud, W., Bataille, R., & Jç©zç©quel, P. (2009). British Journal of Cancer DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605122 Cancer Research UK


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