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Quantitation of Thyroid Peroxidase mRNA in Peripheral Blood for Early Detection of Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma
12
Citations
10
References
2006
Year
Tumor BiologyThyroid Peroxidase MrnaMedicineThyroid DiseasePathologyPeripheral BloodWhole BloodThyroid Papillary CarcinomaThyroid Peroxidase GeneCancer CellsThyroid HormoneMolecular DiagnosticsOncologyRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchEndocrine-related CancerOxidative Stress
We applied quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to detect tissue-specific mRNAs in circulating cancer cells for the diagnosis of early-stage cancer. By Northern blotting, the thyroid peroxidase gene (TPO) was strictly expressed in the thyroid. We also used RT-PCR to examine TPO and thyroid stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) mRNAs in peripheral blood in 33 thyroid papillary carcinoma patients at stages I (23 cases), II (8 cases) and III (3 cases), 49 noncancer patients with benign thyroid diseases, and 20 healthy volunteers. TPO mRNA was detected in 14 of 23 (61%) cases of stage I carcinoma but only 2 of 49 cases with benign thyroid disease. TPO mRNA was not detected in 20 healthy volunteers. By real-time quantitative RT-PCR, the estimated number of thyrocytes in the circulation ranged from 0.24 and 2700 cells per milliliter of whole blood in 7 of 9 patients at stages I and II, and thyrocyte number did not correlate with tumor size or serum thyroglobulin level. Our results might suggest that detection and quantification of tissue-specific mRNAs (e.g., TPO) in peripheral blood could serve as a means to identify potential tumor markers at early stages of cancer.
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