BMC Cancer (Jul 2018)

A pilot study to profile salivary angiogenic factors to detect head and neck cancers

  • L. van der Merwe,
  • Y. Wan,
  • H. J. Cheong,
  • C. Perry,
  • C. Punyadeera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-018-4656-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Early diagnosis of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCCs) is an appealing way to increase survival rates in these patients as well as to improve quality of life post-surgery. Angiogenesis is a hallmark of tumor initiation and progression. We have investigated a panel of angiogenic factors in saliva samples collected from HNSCC patients and controls using the Bio-Plex ProTM assays. Methods We have identified a panel of five angiogenic proteins (sEGFR, HGF, sHER2, sIL-6Ra and PECAM-1) to be elevated in the saliva samples collected from HNSCC patients (n = 58) compared to a control cohort (n = 8 smokers and n = 30 non-smokers). Results High positive correlations were observed between the following sets of salivary proteins; sEGFR:sHER2, sEGFR:HGF, sEGFR:sIL-6Rα, sHER2:HGF and sHER2:sIL6Ra. A moderate positive correlation was seen between FGF-basic and sEGFR. Conclusion We have shown that angiogenic factor levels in saliva can be used as a potential diagnostic biomarker panel in HNSCC.

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