Could invigorating the immune system prevent lung cancer?
By Catharine Paddock
PhD
Fact checked by Paula Field
Fact checked by Paula Field
Scientists have identified
biological changes in apparently normal airway tissue that could potentially
predict the development of lung cancer. The changes alter gene and cell
activity in the immune system.
A team from Boston University
School of Medicine in Massachusetts led the study that made these findings.
The researchers examined
samples of precancerous lesions from the airway tissues of people who smoke or
used to smoke. The team followed the individuals for a number of years to see
whose lesions became cancerous.
In a Nature Communications
paper, they describe how they identified "four molecular subtypes" of
precancerous lesions with "distinct" tissue and immune system
differences.
It is possible to detect the
differences in airway tissue before it develops precancerous signs, says senior
study author Avrum E. Spira, who is a professor of medicine, pathology, and
bioinformatics at Boston University and director of its Johnson & Johnson
Innovation Lung Cancer Center.
Such findings could lead to
ways of screening and monitoring people who smoke and have a high risk of lung
cancer, he adds, noting that they could also lead to new drugs that prevent or
stop lung cancer by boosting the immune system.
Need for earlier detection of
lung cancer
Lung cancer is the leading
cause of cancer deaths worldwide. According to the World Health Organization
(WHO), lung cancer was responsible for 1.76 million deaths in 2018.
In the United States, where it
accounts for around 13 percent of new cancers, lung cancer kills more men and
women each year than cancers of the colon, breast, and prostate together,
according to the American Cancer Society (ACS).
On average, a man in the U.S.
has around a 1 in 15 chance that he will develop lung cancer during his
lifetime. For a woman in the U.S., this figure is around 1 in 17. The chance is
higher for people who smoke and lower for those who do not.
One of the reasons that lung
cancer kills so many people is because, while the disease usually develops
slowly, it is often the case that by the time people notice the symptoms, the
cancer has started to spread.
Once cancer spreads, it is
more challenging to treat. Earlier detection could save many lives.
"The lung undergoes many
changes prior to the development of lung cancer," says lead and
corresponding study author Jennifer E. Beane, who is an assistant professor of
medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
Understanding the nature of
these changes creates an opportunity to "both identify people at high risk
for lung cancer and to intercept the disease process," she explains.
Helping the immune system
eliminate lesions
The new research concerns the
relationship between tumors and immunity. A characteristic feature of tumors is
that they develop ways to evade the immune system.
"We think precancer cells
might do that as well," says Prof. Spira. If that be the case, then it
should be possible "to come in and find a way to train the immune system
to eradicate those lesions," he adds.
He and his colleagues used
"deep molecular profiling" and "bioinformatics analysis" to
investigate biopsied samples of precancerous lesions from people who smoked and
people who did not.
They found that samples from
those who were most likely to develop lung cancer years later had much lower
activity in the genes of particular types of immune cell. They named the
genomic signature of the high-risk samples the "Proliferative
subtype."
"Genes involved in
interferon signaling and T-cell-mediated immunity," they write, "were
down-regulated among progressive/persistent lesions within the Proliferative
subtype compared with regressive lesions, and these pathways correlated with
decreases in both innate and adaptive immune cell types."
Less invasive lung tissue
sampling
The team also suggests that it
should be possible to detect these changes using "brushing," which is
a less invasive bronchoscope procedure for obtaining airway samples than doing
biopsies.
A bronchoscope is a device
that doctors and researchers use to look inside the airways of the lungs and
take samples. They do this by inserting a tube containing a light and a camera
into the windpipe and from there into the airways.
To obtain airway tissue
samples using brushing, the investigator collects cells from the tissue surface
by means of a "flexible brush" that comes out through the tube.
"Normal-appearing cells
in the airway can still show you the genomic signature," says Dr. Beane.
Although it is still
"early days," the findings could lead to a simpler way of testing
people who might be "incubating a lung cancer and [we'd] know who to treat
to intercept lung cancer," she adds.
"There is nothing [for
lung cancer] like there is aspirin for colorectal cancer or statins for
cardiovascular disease."
-Prof. Avrum E. Spira
SOURCE: MEDICAL NEWS TODAY
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