The genes may also determine how life threatening
the disease may be in diagnosed patients. The discovery is vital
for physicians because it will help physicians predict or identify
which diseases will spread aggressively. The new findings will
enable doctors on how to potentially address treatments.
Prevalently, the lungs as well as the bones
are popular sites for cancer to spread from the breast. When
breast cancer metastasizes from the breast to the bones and
lungs, it generally leads to cancer-related deaths. Previous
research has shown that when breast cancer spreads to organs,
it accounts for the majority of breast cancer mortality.
According to Gaorav Gupta, the researcher of
the clinical trial on breast cancer, "We are the first
to identify a clinically relevant set of genes that can predict
metastases of breast cancer to the lungs." The medical
research involved a set of breast cancer cell lines from 82
human tumors.
A mouse model was used to imitate the metastases.
Then the mouse was injected with the cells. Lung metastases
were enabled to formulate. Afterwards, the researcher removed
the lung metastases to determine what made the cells so unique
that they would be allowed to develop the metastases.
Next, researchers utilized a "micro array"
technique which allows all 22,000 genes to be monitored and
studies at the same time. The gene causing cancers were identified
and returned to the original cells to confirm that they were
responsible.