PITX2 GENE METHYLATION
Epigenomics, a cancer molecular
diagnostics company based in Frankfurt, Germany, has
reported that PITX2 gene methylation is a
strong, independent prognostic marker that can help doctors
determine a patient's risk for relapse of prostate cancer
after treatment with radical prostatectomy.
Currently, doctors treating
prostate cancer patients after radical prostatectomy know
that the disease recurs in approximately one in 7 patients.
The problem for physicians is that there are few good ways
to accurately determine which of the patients is likely to
have a recurrence.
The clinical study analyzed tissue
samples from 476 prostate cancer patients who had undergone
radical prostatectomy for treatment of prostate cancer. The
goal or primary endpoint of the study was to determine if
the methylation of the PITX2 gene was an
independent biomarker for prostate cancer
recurrence.
The results showed that patients
with an elevated PITX2 gene methylation level had a three
times as high rate of recurrence as opposed to patients with
low PITX2 gene methylation levels.
PITX2 gene methylation remained
a statistically significant independent prognostic factor
even when it was combined with several established
parameters such as Gleason score, tumor staging,
PSA levels prior to surgery, age, and surgical margin
status.
The study was conducted by Epigenomics and
its clinical partners which included Baylor College of
Medicine, the Erasmus Medical
Centeri in The Netherlands, Duke University
Medical Center, the VA Medical Center at Durham, North
Carolina, and University Hospital in Erlangen,
Germany.
The company also announced
that a publication of the clinical study data is
planned.
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