Researchers Say That a Blood Test Could Help Detect Lung Cancer
Scientists have identified a protein-based blood signature that may predict the development of lung cancer up to five years before the disease is diagnosed. The findings add to growing evidence that chronic inflammation plays an important role in cancer development. The discovery could eventually shift the focus from trying to treat advanced disease to preventing lung cancer altogether.
Another major finding involved chronic inflammation. Inflammation is the body’s natural response to injury or infection. When it becomes persistent, however, it can damage healthy tissue over time. The proteins in the blood signature were closely linked to inflammatory processes in the lungs, suggesting inflammation may help trigger the earliest stages of lung cancer. “These findings suggest inflammation may begin shaping cancer development years before a diagnosis is made,” the researchers noted.
Importantly, the results were not limited to smokers. While smoking remains the leading cause of lung cancer, scientists found that the protein signature also identified elevated risk among people who had never smoked. That finding could help doctors identify patients who are currently excluded from many traditional screening programs because they don’t smoke. To reach their conclusions, scientists analyzed data from eight international datasets, including one composed entirely of non-smokers. The protein signature consistently predicted future lung cancer across the different populations.