- AIG, Symbol of Crisis, Watches Its Stock Zoom Back
- Disney Profit, Sales Top Street Forecasts; Shares Jump
- Despite Rhetoric, Obama Has Few Options to Boost Jobs
- US Debating What to Do With Billions of TARP Money Left
- Alleged Florida Ponzi Scheme Could Top $1 Billion
- Forecast From Retailers: Proceed With Caution
- Nordstrom Earnings Miss Forecasts; Shares Take Hit
- Cities With the Most Home Price Reductions
- Housing Recovery 'In Uncharted Territory': HUD Chief
- Intel's Andy Bryant Offers An Explanation
- US 'Actively Working' on Weaker Dollar: Fund Manager
- Options Boil on Biotech Buyout Rumors
- Warren Buffett's $100,000 Offer and $500,000 Advice for Columbia Business School Students
- Activision Blizzard's "Modern Warfare 2" Sales Break Records
- 5-Star Manager's 5 Stocks for Changing Markets
- What's The Forecast from Retailers? Proceed With Caution
- Disney's CFO-Theme Park Chairman Executive Swap
- Road Rage Rants
- Groups challenge TVA river discharge from plant
- Va. delegation seeks briefing on F-22 Raptor fleet
- Dover Corp. to move headquarters to Chicago area
- Zimmer Holdings to sell $1 billion in notes
- PDL BioPharma declares special dividend
- Organizers rethink int'l art show in New Orleans
- W.Va. report raises questions about scholarships
- Centennial of Scouting to be honored on stamp
- Audit: Accounting weaknesses in Okla. Land Office
WASHINGTON - Does a test that promises to find ovarian cancer sooner really do so? Could other tests nearing the market prolong survival by getting patients the right care faster?
A race is on for blood tests to better detect this intractable killer, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is probing whether to crack down on the first one to sell.
It is a time of both hope and confusion.
First, the question is whether testing giant LabCorp jumped the gun in selling OvaSure as an ovarian cancer screening test before researchers proved that it catches the tumor in an early, treatable stage without falsely alarming too many healthy women. A legal quirk let sales begin without formal FDA approval.
In fact, U.S. and British scientists are just beginning studies specially designed to prove if signs of ovarian cancer can be measured reliably in blood months, even a year, before a tumor becomes life-threatening.
"You really need evidence that screening actually saves lives, or at least prolongs survival," cautions Dr. Robert Bast Jr., an ovarian biomarker expert at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.
While the FDA will discuss its probe of OvaSure, it is watching the field closely.
"It's not a question of if, it's a question of when the right test will come along with the right credentialing to help improve health care in this important area," says Dr. Steven Gutman, FDA's diagnostic testing chief.
At the same time, competing companies are seeking FDA approval for a different approach: Blood tests to help identify which women with an ovarian lump or cyst are most likely to have cancer, so they can have their crucial first surgery — the one that diagnoses malignancy — done by a specialist.
Thousands of women get cysts but only an unlucky fraction turn out to be cancer. Studies show even advanced patients can live many months longer if that very first operation is done by a gynecologic oncologist, who knows where cancer hides and how to remove pelvic lymph nodes, instead of the general surgeon most see today.
"That's a big, big step forward for women because it allows them to get the proper care," says Dr. Richard Moore of Brown University, who led a study of Fujirebio Diagnostics Inc.'s so-called triage test that correctly predicted cancerous cysts more than 90 percent of the time.
"It really is an unmet need," agrees Bast.
Symptoms strike after cancer has spread
Most women see a doctor for symptoms — bloating, a swollen abdomen, pelvic pain, frequent urination — that strike after the cancer has spread, when long-term survival plummets.
Women at high risk because of gene mutations are advised to have their ovaries removed for protection. For the general population, the goal is a blood test to detect early cancer signs such as molecules that tumor cells shed, or perhaps unusual hormone changes, without sending too many women to unnecessary surgery. In the pipeline:
- Two tumor markers, CA125 and one just approved by FDA called HE4, used to track if chemotherapy is working or cancer is returning. A one-time CA125 test can't screen seemingly healthy women because levels rise with benign cysts, endometriosis, even normal menstruation. But Fujirebio's triage test uses HE4 and CA125 to assess who most likely has a benign cyst and whose may be cancer.
- LabCorp in June began marketing to high-risk women a screening test developed by Yale University, under a law that allows a single laboratory to offer testing without FDA review. Yale researchers used OvaSure on blood samples stored from cancer patients and healthy women, and found it correctly identified cancer 95 percent of the time with few false alarms. But specialists say that doesn't prove OvaSure can detect when cancer is forming — just that it spotted tumors in the already diagnosed few with early stage disease.
"We believe you are offering a high risk test that has not received adequate clinical validation and may harm the public health," the FDA warned LabCorp last month.
The FDA several years ago forced a similarly marketed ovarian test off the market. LabCorp spokesman Eric Lindblom wouldn't disclose results of a recent FDA meeting, but said Yale is working to validate OvaSure and "we're continuing to offer the test at this time."
Tracking seemingly healthy women well before they are diagnosed is the only way to prove a test finds cancer early, says Dr. Michael Birrer of the National Cancer Institute — work just beginning.
Dr. Nicole Urban of Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center is heading a multi-hospital test of blood stored a full year before 120 women were diagnosed with ovarian cancer, to see which biomarkers are most promising.
"The thing we did not know is how early these markers give a signal," said Urban, whose hunt is joined by Yale, M.D. Anderson and other leading ovarian cancer centers.
Also, British researchers have enrolled 200,000 women in a study to see if annual CA125 testing plus transvaginal ultrasounds will spot simmering tumors. The idea: High jumps in CA125 levels might give a better signal than a one-time test.
- Warren Buffett and Bill Gates spoke to Columbia students, and Buffett made the students a startling offer.
- They may have wrecked their companies or saved our economy. Tell us what you think.
- Big pharma embraces social media, but how much should a tightly regulated sector say on Facebook or Twitter?
- A European dating site finds lovelorn singles from one country to be consistently uglier. Which is it?
- Contributor David Pogue looks at two of the latest efforts to perfect the digital pocket camera.
- PepsiCo is ramping up its onsite health facilities for workers.








