Pregnancy Bliss | Reproductive Health Answers
Published: Friday, February 18, 2011 - 17:15
Scientists at The Wistar Institute and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
may have discovered protein markers that could provide doctors with the first reliable
blood test to predict ectopic pregnancies. Their findings are presented in the February
16, 2011 issue of the Journal of Proteome Research. In a related sm
all-scale study
of clinical samples, published recently in the journal Fertility and Sterility, the
researchers found that one of the proteins-ADAM12-showed a nearly 97 percent correlation
with ectopic pregnancy.
Ectopic pregnancies occur when the embryo implants outside
the womb, the commonest site being the fallopian tubes. As the embryo grows, the
tube could rupture, which results in the inevitable loss of the embryo and, in some
cases can be
life-threatening for the woman herself. There is no single proven blood
test for ectopic pregnancy, and current diagnosis relies on the use of ultrasound.
"Here we describe a group of proteins that, with further refinement, could make a
simple blood test for ectopic pregnancy," said David W. Speicher, Ph.D., professor
and co-leader of Wistar's Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis Program and director
of Wistar's Center for Systems and Computational Biology. "This is also a proof-of-principle
demonstration of a new method for the discovery of new blood-borne markers that may
serve as diagnostic blood tests to detect or predict a variety of clinical conditions
and diseases, from ectopic pregnancy to cancer."
Proteomics diagnostic potential
According to Speicher, their study points to the power of proteomics-the study of
the sum total of proteins that the body is making at a given time-in understanding
the state of health or disease in people. Proteomics provides researchers an "unbiased"
approach to the discovery of biomarkers, proteins in this case, which could be used
to signal the presence of a particular clinical disorder or disease.
"Most biomarkers
being used clinically today were first discovered by focused studies of proteins
known to be associated with a disease, such as the prostate-specific antigen, PSA,
test for prostate cancer," Speicher explained. "Proteomics is unbiased in the sense
that we are not trying to confirm the presence of a known protein, we simply compare
the entire protein profile of people in a particular clinical condition or disease
state to the protein profile of people in a healthy state."
"Instead of a single
biomarker, we can define a panel of such markers, creating a test that weighs the
relative importance of individual proteins," Speicher said. "It makes for more sensitive,
reliable tests."
In the present study, the Speicher laboratory compared the proteomic signature of blood samples taken from known cases of ectopic pregnancy with blood samples taken from women who experienced a normal pregnancy. They discovered about 70 candidate biomarkers that could signal ectopic pregnancy, which stringent statistical analysis whittled down to the 12 most promising biomarkers. While some of the proteins had previously known associations with ectopic pregnancies, the researchers found at least two, including ADAM12, which had never been previously associated with ectopic pregnancy.
Speicher and his team worked in collaboration with Kurt T. Barnhart, M.D., a professor
of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
In a study recently published online by the journal Fertility and Sterility, Barnhart,
Speicher and colleagues at Penn and two other urban academic medical centers reported
on elevated ‘ADAM12’ levels in women seen in emergency rooms for bleeding resulting
from an undiagnosed ectopic pregnancy.
The next step is to further confirm and validate
the usefulness of their panel of biomarkers using additional patient samples in order
to create a practical, reliable blood test for ectopic pregnancy, Speicher says.
Among their goals is to identify particular isoforms-that is, variations of a given
protein-that are most relevant to identifying ectopic pregnancy. Many proteins exhibit
different isoforms in the body; that is, proteins that come from related genes, differences
in processing the gene or modification of the protein in some way by cellular processes.
"The great power of biomarkers is to detect clinical disorders such as ectopic pregnancy
or diseases, such as cancer, early when it is often easiest to treat the patient,"
Speicher said. "Here we can envision a useful blood test that could, as part of routine
early prenatal care, save the lives of many women."
Funding for this studied was
provided through grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Philadelphia
Health Care Trust. The lead author of the study is Lynn A. Beer, a research assistant
in the Speicher laboratory. Co-authors also include Hsin-Yao Tang, Ph.D., a Wistar
staff scientist, and Sira Sriswasdi, a Penn graduate student, both of whom are also
members of the Speicher laboratory.
By Dr Joe Kabyemela, MD