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

Gene mutations linked to worse outcomes in stomach cancer

Genetic insights could lead to tailored treatments, potentially gentler care for some

2025-04-25
(Press-News.org) BETHESDA, MD. (April 25, 2025) — Researchers using next-generation DNA sequencing have identified four specific genes whose mutations are linked to the development and progression of lethal stomach cancers. This could potentially enable doctors to offer targeted treatments that would spare many patients from unnecessarily aggressive procedures, according to a study scheduled for presentation at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025.

"Not all stomach cancers are equal,” said Ulysses Ribeiro, MD, PhD, the study’s lead author and a professor at the Instituto do Câncer do Estado de São Paulo in Brazil. “Today, most gastric cancers are treated the same way — with surgery and chemotherapy — but we hope to identify key molecular differences so we can tailor treatment to the biology of each patient’s tumor.”

Researchers analyzed 21 genes in tumor samples from 87 patients who had undergone surgery and chemotherapy for gastric cancer and then tracked how the mutations related to survival. About one-third of the patients had changes in a specific combination of four genes — BRCA2, CDH1, RHOA, and TP53 — and these patients were more likely to experience a return of their cancer or die from the disease. These mutations included both well-established cancer drivers — such as BRCA2 mutations, which are famously linked to breast and ovarian cancer — as well as previously unknown variants that may be important.

Dr. Ribeiro said the findings support the idea that a more personalized approach — guided by the genetic makeup of each patient’s tumor — may lead to better outcomes and, for some patients, less aggressive treatment.

To help bring this kind of testing closer to everyday care, Dr. Ribeiro and his colleagues are also working to match these genetic findings with widely available lab tests that use immunohistochemistry to detect proteins expressed by genes. That step could make it easier and more affordable to screen tumors for high-risk features in the future.

The study focused on patients from a Western population — a group that has been underrepresented in gastric cancer research. Most past studies have been conducted in East Asia, where the disease is more common.

While more research is needed before these findings change medical practice, they offer a promising path forward, Dr. Ribeiro said. “We believe that these findings move us closer to more personalized treatment based on each tumor’s biology.”

 

DDW Presentation Details

Dr. Ribeiro will present data from the study, “Next-generation DNA sequencing identifies somatic mutations associated to prognosis in gastric cancer patients,” abstract 152, at 10:24 a.m. PDT, Saturday, May 3. For more information about featured studies, as well as a schedule of availability for featured researchers, please visit www.ddw.org/press. 

###

Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) is the largest international gathering of physicians, researchers, and academics in the fields of gastroenterology, hepatology, endoscopy, and gastrointestinal surgery. Jointly sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD), the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA), the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract (SSAT), DDW is an in-person and online meeting from May 3-6, 2025. The meeting showcases nearly 6,000 abstracts and more than 1,000 lectures on the latest advances in GI research, medicine, and technology. More information can be found at www.ddw.org

 

 

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Blood proteins can predict liver disease up to 16 years before symptoms

2025-04-25
BETHESDA, MD (April 25, 2025) — Scientists have identified five specific blood proteins that can accurately predict a person’s risk for developing a serious form of liver disease as early as 16 years before they experience symptoms, enabling early intervention and possible prevention and treatment, according to a study to be presented at Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) 2025. The findings address metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), which has become the most common form of liver disease worldwide and is continuing to increase. People with MASLD face up to twice the mortality rate of those ...

Study: New DNA-reading technology holds promise for rare disease research

2025-04-25
Cutting-edge DNA mapping technology identified new genetic information that can help researchers decipher more genetic diseases, a new study found. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  The technology identified more genomic imprinting in DNA—10 times as much—than previously published data. Genomic imprinting occurs when only one parent’s gene is expressed in a child’s genetic makeup, which contributes to rare pediatric diseases, ...

Study: Antibiotic exposure before age two linked to childhood obesity

2025-04-25
Taking antibiotics within the first two years of life is linked to a higher body mass index (BMI) in childhood, according to a new study. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  Researchers found that children exposed to antibiotics in the first two years of life had a 0.067 higher BMI adjusted for age and sex, a 9% greater risk to be overweight, and a 20% greater risk to be obese than children who were unexposed. Researchers found no correlation between BMI and antibiotic use before pregnancy, during pregnancy, or at birth. Antibiotics ...

Study: Artificial intelligence more accurately identifies child abuse

2025-04-25
Artificial intelligence (AI) can help better identify prevalence of physical abuse of children seen in the emergency room, a new study found. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  Researchers used a machine-learning model to estimate instances of child abuse seen in emergency departments based on diagnostic codes for high-risk injury and physical abuse. The researchers’ approach better predicted abuse rates than those that rely solely on diagnostic codes entered by a provider or administrative staff. Relying on abuse codes alone ...

Study: Opioid use disorder treatment improves pregnancy outcomes

2025-04-25
Pregnant women living with opioid use disorder (OUD) and their infants had significantly better health outcomes when treated with buprenorphine, according to a new study at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  Pregnant women who received buprenorphine, a medication used to treat OUD, were less likely to have a preterm birth, face serious health complications, or have their infants hospitalized in the NICU compared to those ...

Study: Education improves in-home gun safety

2025-04-25
More information about gun safety has increasingly led parents to ask about firearms in the homes their kids visit, according to a new national study. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.   Every new source of information increased parents’ likelihood of asking by 40%. Researchers found that 16% of caregivers who had never received firearm safety information asked about firearms where their child was visiting, compared to 79% of those who had ...

Study: Treatment ineffective for newborns with low oxygen or blood supply

2025-04-25
Erythropoietin, a treatment for newborns with critically low levels of oxygen or blood supply to the brain at birth, does not prevent death or disability, according to a new multinational study. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  Researchers found that a high-dose treatment with erythropoietin, paired with standard cooling treatments, does not reduce death, rate of cerebral palsy, or physical or cognitive impairment ...

Study: Children with chronic conditions at risk for severe RSV outcomes

2025-04-25
Young children with chronic conditions are more likely to be hospitalized for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) than healthy children, according to a new study. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.   Toddlers with chronic conditions are hospitalized for RSV at twice the rate as healthy toddlers over their first two seasons. The risk was highest for children born very prematurely under 28 weeks of gestation, or with conditions affecting multiple organs, the lungs, heart, or digestive system. Researchers recommend that children with those specific conditions ...

Study: Telehealth in pediatric primary care supports judicious antibiotic prescribing

2025-04-25
Children treated with primary care telehealth visits were less likely to receive antibiotics for acute respiratory tract infections than those examined in person, according to a new study. The research will be presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu.  While providers prescribed 12% fewer antibiotics during initial primary care telehealth visits compared to in-person appointments, both settings had similarly high rates of following established guidelines, according to researchers. In the two weeks after the initial ...

Animal energy usage made visible through video

2025-04-25
Energy scarcity is a central driver of animal behavior and evolution. The amazing diversity of life on this planet is a testament to the plethora of novel biological solutions to the problem of securing and maintaining energy. However, despite being so central to biology, it remains difficult to quantify, and thereby empirically analyze, energy consumption. While organisms use energy for a very wide variety of processes – from growth to cognition – one activity is a major drain for many animals: movement. For highly mobile animals, movement is as such a powerful lens through which to estimate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Endophytic fungi from halophyte Sesuvium portulacastrum enhance maize growth and salt tolerance

Quality of kids’ diets linked with dad’s eating habits as a teen

Alliance trial shows dual immunotherapy improves progression-free survival in advanced squamous cell skin cancer

Insights from immunotherapy trial inform new approaches to treating advanced skin cancer

Genome breakthrough reveals secrets behind rapid growth and invasiveness of tropical vine Merremia boisiana

Transforming the certification process of 3D-printed critical components

UC Davis clinical trial shows biomarkers hold clue in treating aggressive prostate cancer

UT Health San Antonio researchers discover new links between heart disease and dementia

AADOCR announces new SCADA/Dentsply Sirona Research Award

Mass General Brigham researchers present key findings at ASCO

Student researchers put UTA on national stage

Hertz Foundation and Breakthrough Energy partner to advance climate and energy solutions

New study reveals how tiny insects detect force

New 3D genome mapping technology sheds light on how plants regulate photosynthesis

Dinosaur eggshell study confirms biogenic origin of secondary eggshell units

Transforming immunotherapy design

New book with a global view of men’s experiences with partner violence

New research recovers evidence for lost mountains from Antarctica’s past

Scientists discover new evidence of intermediate-mass black holes

Predicting underwater landslides before they strike

What will it take to reduce primary care doctor burnout?

Small currents, big impact: Satellite breakthrough reveals hidden ocean forces

Single-atom catalysts change spin state when boosted by a magnetic field

Integrated metasurface for quantum analog computation: A new scheme to phase reconstruction

PolyU research reveals rising soil nitrous acid emissions driven by climate change and fertilisation accelerate global ozone pollution

The EU should allow gene editing to make organic farming more sustainable, researchers say

At-home heart attacks and cardiac deaths on the rise since COVID-19 pandemic

Projected outcomes of removing fluoride from U.S. public water systems

Parental education, own education, and cognitive function in middle-aged and older adults

Sacred moment experiences among internal medicine physicians

[Press-News.org] Gene mutations linked to worse outcomes in stomach cancer
Genetic insights could lead to tailored treatments, potentially gentler care for some