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Diagnosis 2.0 
  A new blood test promises to spot cancer and Alzheimer’s long before you get 
sick

 By Kalee Thompson | November 2007  

  
 By the time a doctor diagnoses you with cancer or a neurodegenerative 
disease, you may have been living with it for years—a troubling fact, given 
that early detection is the most important factor in successful treatment. 
Now, Power3 Medical Products, a biotech firm in Houston, Texas, has developed 
simple, low-cost blood tests for breast cancer, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's 
that will allow physicians to spot disease the moment it shows up in a 
patient's body—years earlier than today's most advanced technologies can 
catch it. "With our tests, you don't have to wait around for 6 or 10 years 
[to spot the problem]," says CEO Steven Rash.
 Power3's breast-cancer test, to be released early next year, is the first 
diagnostic to emerge from a fast-growing field known as proteomics that looks 
for telltale proteins in a person's blood, just as genetic tests screen for 
disease-causing genes. Genes give instructions, but proteins do the body's 
work, so although genetic tests can determine whether a person has a gene 
that increases his or her risk of developing a specific disease (women who 
carry the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes run a greater risk of developing breast 
cancer, for example), proteomic tests like Power3's can tell whether the gene
—and thus, the disease—is active, long before physical symptoms appear.
 The new breast-cancer test is much less invasive than a mammogram or biopsy. 
A doctor samples a patient's blood and sends it to Power3's lab, where 
scientists search for 22 irregular proteins that Power3 has identified as 
early signs of breast cancer. Initially the test will debut in 40 clinics 
that treat women at high risk for breast cancer, Rash says. Women under 40 
years of age with high-risk genetic or family factors should benefit the 
most, he adds, because their denser breast tissue makes mammography 
significantly less effective. Scientists have been working to develop 
proteomic tests for the past three years, but they were derailed by 
inconsistent test results. Early data indicate that Power3 has overcome this 
challenge. In a blind trial of 60 blood samples provided by Mercy Women's 
Center in Oklahoma City, the test scored a 97 percent rate of identifying 
cancer in samples from diagnosed patients and a 93 percent rate of correctly 
identifying healthy women as cancer-free. A second 100-patient trial will be 
completed by the end of the year. In comparison, mammograms miss up to 30 
percent of breast cancers, and 75 percent of the biopsies performed after an 
irregular mammogram prove benign. 
 "There's tremendous promise in proteomics," says Lance Liotta, a proteomic 
scientist at George Mason University. "The early diagnosis and individualized 
therapy coming out of the science is going to change medicine." But Power3's 
results are not conclusive, so until further testing confirms the test's 
reliability, it will just supplement existing tests. 
 The company is also validating protein-based tests for Parkinson's and 
Alzheimer's, the latter an affliction for which the only conclusive test is 
currently an autopsy. Among the possible benefits of a proteomic Alzheimer's 
test, due out late next year, would be the ability to definitively separate 
sufferers from those with other neurodegenerative problems, now a major 
obstacle to running effective clinical trials of drugs for Alzheimer's. 
 "Power3 won't do it all," says Essam Sheta, the company's director of 
biochemistry. "But my expectation is that in the next five years, we as a 
scientific community will be able to develop diagnostic tests for many, many 
types of diseases."

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