Telomeres: A Game-Changer In CLL Testing
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is a slowly developing blood cancer in which patients produce mutated versions of white blood cells that build up in the blood, bone marrow and lymph nodes, and crowd out healthy blood cells. It progresses at different rates in different people, and in a third of patients it never progresses at all.
Until now, there has been no
accurate test to indicate whether and how fast the cancer will develop for
individual patients. A new test, developed by researchers at Cardiff University,
measures the length of sections of DNA in cancer cells called telomeres, which
are found at the end of chromosomes.
Telomeres shorten every time
a cell divides to create a new cell and eventually the chromosome ends are left
exposed, leading to extensive DNA damage that speeds up cancer progression. The
researchers have found that people who have CLL cells with very short telomeres
when diagnosed are much more likely to have a fast-progressing cancer.
It is thought that the test
could be a game-changer and could guide decisions on which drugs to give to
patients. It also has the potential to change how other cancers, including
myeloma and breast cancer, are treated. While previous versions of the test had
taken a week to process, results can now be ready in a day.
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To Know more about Cytopathology
Session 4:
Cytopathology
is a branch of pathology that reviews and findings sicknesses on the cell level.
A cytopathologist is an anatomic pathologist prepared in the analysis of human
sickness by methods for the investigation of cells gotten from body discharges
and liquids by scratching, washing, or wiping the surface of a sore, or by the
goal of a tumor mass or body organ with a fine needle. Cytopathology is
likewise normally used to research thyroid sores, ailments including sterile
body cavities (peritoneal, pleural, and cerebrospinal), and an extensive
variety of other body locales.
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