Pinpointing New Biomarkers for Cancer Wasting Syndrome

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An analysis of biomarkers in patient blood samples could help with early detection of cachexia, or cancer wasting syndrome, according to new research published in Cancers. The study by Cedars-Sinai Health Sciences University investigators, explores biologic signals detectable in the blood that could be used to design future strategies for assessing patient risk and developing therapies aimed at mitigating fatigue and muscle and fat loss experienced by many patients with cancer.

“We found that in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, cachexia biomarkers change over time,” said Kamya Sankar, MD, co-medical director of the Thoracic Disease Research Group at Cedars-Sinai Cancer and corresponding author of the study. “And treatments targeting one of the early cachexia biomarkers we identified, an inflammatory protein called GDF-15, are already under evaluation in clinical trials.”

Investigators measured the blood of 27 patients with non-small cell lung cancer at two different time points. In patients with early cachexia, they found higher levels of inflammatory proteins such as GDF-15. In patients with later-stage cachexia, they found increased mitochondrial DNA, which comes from the parts of cells that convert food into energy.

Larger, prospective studies are required to validate the clinical benefit of these biomarkers, but they could serve as the basis for risk assessment of patients and may inform design of future clinical trials of therapies for cancer-associated cachexia, Sankar said.

Additional Cedars-Sinai authors include Elham Kazemian, Nicole Lorona, Carlos D. Cruz-Hernández, Mitra Mastali, Akil A. Merchant, Jennifer Van Eyk, Karen L. Reckamp, Neil A. Bhowmick, and Jane C. Figueiredo.

Other authors include Alex K. Bryant and Puneeth Iyenga

Source: Cedars-Sinai Medical Center