Colorectal cancer screening with odour material by canine scent detectionOBJECTIVE: Early detection and early treatment are of vital importance to the successful treatment of various cancers. The development of a novel screening method that is as economical and non-invasive as the faecal occult blood test (FOBT) for early detection of colorectal cancer (CRC) is needed. A study was undertaken using canine scent detection to determine whether odour material can become an effective tool in CRC screening. DESIGN: Exhaled breath and watery stool samples were obtained from patients with CRC and from healthy controls prior to colonoscopy. Each test group consisted of one sample from a patient with CRC and four control samples from volunteers without cancer. These five samples were randomly and separately placed into five boxes. A Labrador retriever specially trained in scent detection of cancer and a handler cooperated in the tests. The dog first smelled a standard breath sample from a patient with CRC, then smelled each sample station and sat down in front of the station in which a cancer scent was detected. RESULTS: 33 and 37 groups of breath and watery stool samples, respectively, were tested. Among patients with CRC and controls, the sensitivity of canine scent detection of breath samples compared with conventional diagnosis by colonoscopy was 0.91 and the specificity was 0.99. The sensitivity of canine scent detection of stool samples was 0.97 and the specificity was 0.99. The accuracy of canine scent detection was high even for early cancer. Canine scent detection was not confounded by current smoking, benign colorectal disease or inflammatory disease. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that a specific cancer scent does indeed exist and that cancer-specific chemical compounds may be circulating throughout the body. These odour materials may become effective tools in CRC screening. In the future, studies designed to identify cancer-specific volatile organic compounds will be important for the development of new methods for early detection of CRC.
Anti‐DFS70 antibodies in 597 healthy hospital workersOBJECTIVE: Autoantibodies against DFS70 (dense fine speckles 70) antigen (also known as lens epithelium-derived growth factor) have been recently identified among the antinuclear antibodies (ANAs) in patients with atopic disorders. We undertook this study to examine the frequency of anti-DFS70 antibodies in a large number of healthy people. METHODS: Sera of 597 healthy individuals working in a hospital (142 men, 455 women) were analyzed for ANAs and for anti-DFS70 antibodies by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) with HEp-2 cells as a substrate and by immunoblotting using DFS70 recombinant protein and whole HeLa cell extract. RESULTS: ANAs were present in 20% of all individuals by IIF. Nine percent of subjects were ANA positive at a serum dilution of 1:40, 4.0% at 1:80, 5.5% at 1:160, 1.0% at 1:320, and 0.3% at 1:640. There were 64 anti-DFS70 antibody-positive individuals. Surprisingly, this was 11% of the whole population and 54% of the ANA-positive population. The percentage of female anti-DFS70 antibody-positive subjects (86%; 55 of 64 subjects) was higher than the percentage of female anti-DFS70 antibody-negative subjects (75%; 398 of 533 subjects) (P < 0.05). The prevalence of anti-DFS70 antibody-positive sera decreased with increasing age (P = 0.0017). CONCLUSION: Considering that anti-DFS70 antibody positivity is rare in patients with systemic autoimmune diseases, introducing the anti-DFS70 antibody examination as a screening test for ANA-positive persons could be used to rule out systemic autoimmune diseases, resulting in considerable cost-saving potential. In addition, this test defines a subpopulation of healthy people in whom long-term followup might reveal health-related implications of this finding, since anti-DFS70 antibodies have been shown to be associated with some illnesses.
Risk factors associated with surgical site infection in upper and lower gastrointestinal surgerySpontaneous improvement of hematologic abnormalities in patients having juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia with specific RAS mutationsOf 11 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) carrying RAS mutations (8 with NRAS mutations, 3 with KRAS2 mutations), 5 had a profound elevation in either or both the white blood cells and spleen size at diagnosis. Three patients had no or modest hepatosplenomegaly and mild leukocytosis at presentation but subsequently showed a marked increase in spleen size with or without hematologic exacerbation, for which nonintensive chemotherapy was initiated. The other three patients with NRAS or KRAS2 glycine to serine substitution received no chemotherapy, but hematologic improvement has been observed during a 2- to 4-year follow up. In the third group, all hematopoietic cell lineages analyzed had the RAS mutations at the time of hematologic improvement, whereas DNA obtained from the nails had the wild type. Additionally, numbers of circulating granulocyte-macrophage progenitors were significantly reduced during the clinical course. Thus, some patients with JMML with specific RAS mutations may have spontaneously improving disease.
Role of Transforming Growth Factor-β1 in Invasion and Metastasis in Gastric CarcinomaPURPOSE: Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) is a major modulator of cellular proliferation and extracellular matrix formation. We determined the role of TGF-beta1 in invasion and metastasis in gastric cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We detected TGF-beta1 expression in primary and lymph node metastatic lesions of gastric cancer, using an antibody and in situ hybridization. The plasma TGF-beta1 levels in the peripheral vein and in the tumor drainage vein were assayed. RESULTS: In the cytoplasm of cancer cells, TGF- beta1 was immunostained in 35.9% (78 of 217) of primary gastric carcinomas, and this expression was confirmed by in situ hybridization. Of 59 gastric carcinomas with a TGF-beta1-negative primary tumor, metastatic lymph nodes were positive for TGF-beta1 staining in 32 cases (54.2%). Positive staining of TGF-beta1 in gastric cancer tissues was closely related to serosal invasion, infiltrative growth, and lymph node metastasis. Multivariate analysis showed that the expression of TGF-beta1 was an independent risk factor for serosal invasion and infiltrative growth of the tumor. The plasma level of TGF-beta1 did not differ between TGF-beta1-negative and -positive groups. There were also no differences in plasma TGF-beta1 levels among each tumor stage, between the peripheral and the tumor drainage veins, and between preoperative and postoperative testings. CONCLUSION: Transforming growth factor-beta1 is closely related to the invasion and metastasis of gastric cancer, and production of TGF-beta1 in the tumor does not contribute to the total amount of TGF-beta1 in the blood circulation. We interpret our observations to mean that in a tumor microenvironment, TGF-beta1 alters the biologic behavior of the tumor.