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MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth
Crown at (312) 503-8928 or at e-crown@northwestern.edu
February 3, 2004
More Study Needed on Protein-Cancer Link
CHICAGO --- A preliminary study suggests that persistent inflammation,
as indicated by increased levels of C-reactive protein in the blood,
is a risk factor for the development of colon cancer.
However, according to an editorial by Northwestern University researcher Boris
Pasche, M.D., the link between chronic inflammation and colon cancer must be
further explored before C-reactive protein is confirmed as a risk predictor.
The
study and the editorial appear in the Feb. 4 issue of The Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Pasche, a hematologist/oncologist, is assistant professor of medicine at the
Feinberg School of Medicine and director of cancer genetics at The Robert H.
Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. Pasche’s
co-author on the editorial was Charles N. Serhan, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
and Harvard Medical School, Boston.
C-reactive protein is produced primarily in the liver and is a marker of inflammation.
It was discovered about 70 years ago as a marker of infection in patients with
pneumonia. Recent studies have shown that increased levels of C-reactive protein
may also be predictive of heart attack and other cardiovascular events and
may play a role in the development of some forms of cancer, including colon
cancer.
The JAMA study followed for 10 years almost 23,000 individuals who had provided
a blood sample in 1989. The authors found that in 131 persons who later developed
colon cancer, the concentration of C-reactive protein was significantly higher
than that among a healthy control group. Among rectal cancer cases, levels
of C-reactive protein were not significantly different from those in the normal
group.
“More than 70 years after being discovered in patients with pneumonia,
C-reactive protein is now linked with one of the most common forms of cancer,” Pasche
said.
Pasche said results of the study will stimulate research to further explore
the relationship between inflammation and colon cancer. the future of C-reactive
protein as a marker of colon cancer risk remains to be further defined.
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