Queen's University cancer researcher Madhuri
Koti has discovered a biomarker that will help lead to better
predictions of the success of chemotherapy in ovarian cancer patients.
This discovery could lead to better treatment options in the fight
against ovarian cancer. Biomarkers are an indicator of a biological state or condition. "Recent successes in harnessing the immune system to combat cancer are evidence for the significant roles of a cancer patient's
immune responses in fighting cancer," explains Dr. Koti (Biomedical and
Molecular Sciences). "Many of these success are based on boosting
anti-cancer immunity via different therapies. Such therapies would prove
to be most effective when coupled with markers predicting a patient's
eventual response to a specific therapy."
Dr. Koti conducted the study in retrospective cohorts of over 200 ovarian cancer patients.
The study utilized a combination of recent cutting-edge and more
established detection technologies for identifying such markers. Initial
discovery of these markers was made in frozen tumor tissues accrued
from tumor banks such as the Ontario Tumor Bank and the Ottawa Health
Research Institute and Gynecology-Oncology and Pathology services of the
CHUMHospital Notre-Dame, Montreal.
Phase II validations are currently under way in retrospective cohorts
of over 500 ovarian cancer patient tumors accrued from the Terry Fox
Research Institute-Ovarian Cancer Canada partnered, Canadian Ovarian
Experimental Unified Resource.
A major impact of this discovery is that these novel markers, when
used at the time of treatment initiation in the specific type of ovarian cancer
patient, will help gynecologic oncologists make decisions on additional
treatment needed in these patients, thus increasing the potential for
patient survival.
Ovarian cancer leads to approximately 152,000 deaths among women
worldwide each year, making it a leading cause of gynecological cancer
related deaths in women.
This site is for information on the various Chemo treatments and Stem Cell Therapies since 1992. This journey became bitter sweet in 2014, with the passing of my beautiful and dear wife. Sherry, had fought Non - Hodgkins Lymphoma(NHL) since 1990, in and out of remissions time and time again. From T-Cell therapies(1990's) to Dual Cord Blood Transplant(2014), she was in Clinical Trials over the years. This site is for informational purpose only and is not to promote the use of certain therapies.
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