PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Mapping cell behaviors in high-grade glioma to improve treatment

2024-01-30
(Press-News.org) PHOENIX — High-grade gliomas are cancerous tumors that spread quickly in the brain or spinal cord. In a new study led by Mayo Clinic, researchers found invasive brain tumor margins of high-grade glioma (HGG) contain biologically distinct genetic and molecular alterations that point to aggressive behavior and disease recurrence. The findings suggest insights into potential treatments that could modify the course of the disease.

The study published in Nature Communications, profiled 313 tumor biopsies from 68 HGG patients using genomics (study of genes), transcriptomics (study of gene expression at the mRNA level) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Glioma is a growth of cells that starts in the brain or spinal cord. The invasive margins of HGG have long remained a mystery due to the difficulties in surgical biopsy of these regions. The aggressive nature of most gliomas, and the visual and textural similarities between the affected regions and normal tissue, create a challenge for neurosurgeons during removal of the tumor. Some glioma cells may get left behind.

The cells in a glioma look like healthy brain cells called glial cells. As a glioma grows, it forms a mass of cells called a tumor. The tumor can grow to press on brain or spinal cord tissue, causing a range of symptoms. There are many types of glioma. Some grow slowly and aren't considered to be cancers. Others are considered cancerous. Malignant gliomas grow quickly and can invade healthy brain tissue.

Leland Hu, M.D., a neuroradiologist at Mayo Clinic in Arizona, says the study also shows that MRI techniques, such as dynamic susceptibility contrast and diffusion tensor imaging, can help distinguish between the genetic and molecular alterations of invasive tumors, which is important for clinically characterizing areas that are difficult to surgically biopsy.

"We need to understand what is driving tumor progression," says Dr. Hu. "Our results demonstrate an expanded role of advanced MRI for clinical decision-making for high-grade glioma."

The study also provides insight into resistance to treatment that could improve future outcomes.

"Our hope is that these clinical MRI techniques will lead to improved diagnosis, prognosis and treatment," says Nhan Tran, Ph.D., a cancer biologist in the Department of Cancer Biology at Mayo Clinic in Arizona. "We are looking at this research through the lens of therapeutic decision-making for patients."

The entire dataset, including genomics, transcriptomics and MRI, is publicly available to other groups and institutions as a resource to fuel new discoveries beyond what Dr. Hu and colleagues have reported in the initial manuscript.

Review the study for a complete list of authors, disclosures and funding. 

This article originally appeared on Discovery's Edge.

###

About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit organization committed to innovation in clinical practice, education, and research and providing compassion, expertise, and answers to everyone who needs healing. Visit the Mayo Clinic News Network for additional Mayo Clinic news.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Using vibrator found in cell phones, researchers develop 3D tumor spheroids to screen for anti-cancer drugs

2024-01-30
Depending on their location, cancer cells within a three-dimensional (3D) tumor structure can have different microenvironments. Cells in the core of the tumor receive less oxygen (hypoxia) and nutrients than those in the periphery. These varying conditions can drive differences in cell growth rates and drug sensitivities, highlighting the need to study 3D tumor models in lab settings. Until recently, conventional methods used to create such tumor spheroids were time-consuming, produced inconsistent results and involved high setup costs. Investigators at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding ...

Research indicates nearly six million American women became pregnant from rape, sexual coercion, or both during their lifetimes

2024-01-30
Ann Arbor, January 30, 2024 – Experiencing a pregnancy from sexual violence is common in the United States, according to research conducted by investigators at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, published by Elsevier. Nearly six million women in the United States who were raped, sexually coerced (defined as non-physically forced unwanted penetration), or both became pregnant as a result. This equates to about one in twenty American ...

Festive opening of the Institute for Quantitative and Computational Biosciences

Festive opening of the Institute for Quantitative and Computational Biosciences
2024-01-30
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) recently inaugurated its new Institute for Quantitative and Computational Biosciences (IQCB) in the presence of Clemens Hoch, the Minister of Science of Rhineland-Palatinate, and Professor Stefan Müller-Stach, JGU's Vice President for Research and Early Career Academics. The IQCB is an interdisciplinary research institute at the interface between the life sciences and neighboring disciplines including mathematics, computer science, physics, chemistry, and engineering, thus generating new opportunities for research by way of, for example, computer-aided analysis of large amounts of data, computer-based ...

Researchers seek to understand how regions of 'cosmic web' influence behavior of galaxies

Researchers seek to understand how regions of cosmic web influence behavior of galaxies
2024-01-30
LAWRENCE — Researchers at the University of Kansas hope to better understand intricate mechanisms behind the evolution of galaxies, which travel through a “cosmic web” of different environments during their lifespans. Gregory Rudnick, professor of physics & astronomy at KU, is leading a team that recently earned a $375,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to study “gas content and star-formation properties of galaxies” that are altered depending on where they are moving through the cosmos. “The primary objective of this project is to comprehend the impact of environmental factors on the transformation of galaxies,” Rudnick ...

Beating the freeze: Up to $11.5 million for eco-friendly control over ice and snow

2024-01-30
Images   New, nontoxic materials could one day keep solar panels and airplane wings ice-free, or protect first responders from frostbite and more, thanks to a new University of Michigan-led project funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.    The research team will study biological molecules used by other living things to survive freezing temperatures. The project officially begins this week and includes researchers from Raytheon Technologies, North Dakota State University and the University of Minnesota.   Existing materials used to accomplish these feats come with serious downsides. For instance, road salts ...

A tie between the most common obesity surgeries

A tie between the most common obesity surgeries
2024-01-30
The two most common obesity surgeries – gastric bypass and gastric sleeve – have few short-term complications and are equivalent in that sense. These are the findings of a study conducted at the University of Gothenburg. Every year, around 5,000 obesity surgeries are performed in Sweden. The person undergoing surgery will normally have a BMI of at least 40, or 35 if they also have other serious medical conditions related to obesity. The most common procedures are gastric bypass, where a large part ...

Study provides new explanation for why placenta may not properly separate at birth, putting mother and newborn at risk

2024-01-30
A new study led by researchers at UCLA may change the way clinicians and scientists understand, diagnose and treat placenta accreta spectrum disorder, a serious condition in which the placenta fails to separate from the uterus at birth, jeopardizing the life and health of both mother and baby. Researchers previously believed that certain overly invasive placental cells, called trophoblasts, were responsible for keeping the connection intact. But this new research, which identifies genetic and cellular changes within single cells where the placenta ...

Ethnic disparities in cancer mortality in the capital and northeast of the State of São Paulo, Brazil

Ethnic disparities in cancer mortality in the capital and northeast of the State of São Paulo, Brazil
2024-01-30
Although the interior of São Paulo state (Brazil) has higher human development indices (HDIs) and fewer Black people as a percentage of the population, they account for a larger proportion of deaths from cancer in the Barretos region than in São Paulo city, the state capital, according to a study supported by FAPESP. An article on the study is published in the journal Cancer Causes & Control. In the 18 cities of the Barretos regional health district (RHD), the number ...

Evolutionary origin of mysterious immune system molecule in humans revealed

Evolutionary origin of mysterious immune system molecule in humans revealed
2024-01-30
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Biological systems can behave as siblings in several ways, including by borrowing something and never giving it back. That appears to be what the human immune system did with a protein that now helps bind and regulate the subunits that make up antibodies, according to a multi-institute research collaboration. They found that, before the immune system evolutionarily co-opted it, the protein originally belonged to gene family responsible for directing cells to move to the right location at the right time to address specific functional needs. The researchers, including Kazuhiko Kawasaki, associate research professor of ...

UCSF scientist wins Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research

UCSF scientist wins Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research
2024-01-30
[New York, January 30, 2024] – Sergio E. Baranzini, PhD, a geneticist, neuroimmunologist and data scientist at the University of California, San Francisco, is the winner of this year’s Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research. Dr. Baranzini is being recognized for his pioneering efforts to integrate vast pools of information to understand complex mechanisms that cause MS and to develop more precise approaches to stop the disease and end it by prevention. Baranzini is a Distinguished Professor and holds the Heidrich Friends and Family endowed chair in Neurology at the University of California, San Francisco ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pandemic-era babies do not have higher autism risk, finds study

Influenza infection during pregnancy and risk of seizures in offspring

Positive autism screening rates in toddlers born during the COVID-19 pandemic

Historical redlining, contemporary gentrification, and severe maternal morbidity in California

Efficacy of gamified digital mental health interventions for pediatric mental health conditions

Perceived CTE and suicidality in former professional football players

Study of former NFL players finds 1 in 3 believe they have CTE

Unlocking the secrets of multispecies hunting

Transforming agriculture from carbon source to sink

City of Hope research spotlight, September 2024

20-week ultrasound in pregnancy is a key driver of disparities in prenatal diagnosis of congenital heart defects

Educators and parents reveal culture of fear, censorship, and loss of learning opportunities in the wake of Florida policies

Energy inefficiency and inability to downsize pose even bigger threat to low-income pensioners than loss of Winter Fuel Payments, Cambridge study suggests

Innovative model provides valuable insights into prostate cancer spread

NIH awards $27M to establish new network of genomics-enabled learning health systems

People prefer to work with higher-paid colleagues

Deeper corals may help shallow reefs recover in the Florida keys

Why saying you’ll ‘never retire’ may be a warning sign

Study reveals high rates of seafood mislabeling and ambiguous market names in Calgary, Alberta, highlighting species of conservation concern

COVID-19 hits older adults hardest; which ones want the updated vaccine?

Mental health issues are a common phenomenon in elite sport

New insights into intellectual disability genetics emerge at Mount Sinai

Older people are more swayed by the impulsive actions of others when making financial decisions – new study reveals

Leading scientists redefine ‘sustainability’ to save the ocean and feed a hungry and warming planet

Experts discover the deadly genetics of cholera, which could be key to its prevention

How remarkable diversity in heat tolerance can help protect coral reefs

Most new recessive developmental disorder diagnoses lie within known genes

Compact “gene scissor” enables effective genome editing

New report: Nvidia is going for quality not quantity with AI chip patents

Do cancer and cancer-related treatments increase cardiovascular disease risk in older cancer survivors?

[Press-News.org] Mapping cell behaviors in high-grade glioma to improve treatment