Researchers
Find Cost-effective Way to Detect Cervical Cancer
Researchers at the
University of Louisville in Kentucky, USA, have found a simple method to detect
cervical cancer which involves just drawing blood and heating it to a higher
temperature.
The test also helps to
determine the stage of the cancer, they have said.
According to the
researchers, ‘Plasma Thermogram’ will make cervical cancer diagnostics easier
and much cheaper in developing countries like India where a majority of
cervical cancer patients are rural women.
It is estimated that more
than 85 per cent of cervical cancers are detected only using the Pap Smear test
in India.
The Louisville researchers
say that the new method could alleviate the burden of cervical cancer.
Mixed Response from Local
Doctors
However, the research has
evoked mixed responses from the local doctors. They say it may not reduce the
disease burden though it could be less painful and intrusive when compared to
Pap Smear and other tests.
The new test requires a
standard blood draw giving 100 to 200 microlitres of blood plasma unlike the
Pap Smear which requires a vaginal swab for the smear test and is hence, less
cumbersome, said Dr Nichola Christine Garbett, lead researcher of the
Department of Medicine at the University of Louisville.
Last year, researchers at
Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai, developed Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid
(VIA) test. It needs just a 5 per cent solution of acetic acid which is smeared
on the cervix after which precancerous cells turn white and can be viewed with
the naked eye using a light and was claimed to
be the cheapest method.
Dr Garbett said that it is
not known if the Plasma Thermogram would be cheaper than the vinegar test.
“The test has very little
consumable cost. We are now using only a blood draw and a calorimeter. If we
develop a point-of-care miniaturised calorimeter needing only a finger-prick,
it would be ideal for use in a developing country scenario such as India
because it will be available at a minimal cost,” Dr Garbett said.
Dr K S Gopinath, surgical
oncologist at HCG Hospital said Plasma Thermogram may not be very useful tool
given manpower, cost of this treatment and the huge burden of cervical cancer.
“This is an indicator of
the tumour burden and may help in modifying cancer-directed treatment. But
cervical cancer burden is very high and it may not be a very useful mass
screening tool.”
Further, the experimental
Plasma Thermogram is now priced at US $250, but with multiple blood samples
tested simultaneously, it could drop to $15.
In India, a Pap Smear test
costs between `450 and 1,000.
The vinegar test can be
done at home without using any additional instruments, but with the help of
Auxiliary Nurse Midwives.
The Plasma Thermogram is
intended to be a complementary test to the Pap Smear, added Dr Garbett.
“Since the blood testing
is done in a very easy format, monitoring can be done more frequently so that
the disease can be detected earlier and doctors can also ensure that the
treatment effectiveness is also closely and more easily monitored,” she
explained.
The research published in
Plos One, a journal of the Public Library of Sciences, says that the test can
find the status of disease in patients and their response to treatment.
“Doctors can then adjust treatment to make it
more effective and this further reduces the cost” Dr Garbett added.
The test is also likely to
be used to monitor other cancers and diseases and for personalised medicine approach
based on a person’s unique Thermogram profile.
‘Mass Trials Are Needed’
Meanwhile, Dr Shakuntala
Baliga, consultant gynaeco-oncologist at Mazumdar-Shaw Centre for Cancer
Research, said that the test is interesting.
“Blood is drawn from a
painless fingerprick and the person does not have to be exposed to a speculum
exam and this test could actually be faster,” she felt.
“Until it is tried at least on 5,000 women and
the chances of false negatives and positives are reduced, we cannot say that it
can be used,” she said. The Plasma Thermogram has been tried on 67 women so
far.
Dr Rani A Bhat, consultant
gynaecological oncologist, HCG Oncology, said risks of cervical cancer and
death from such lesions have remained largely uncontrolled because access to
screening and preventive treatment is limited.
“Any screening test should
be cost-effective, non-invasive and readily available. We need a randomised controlled trial
comparing it with Pap Smear to find which is more accurate and cost-effective.
Screening is considered optimal when the smallest amount of resources is used
to achieve the greatest benefit,” she said.
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