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    Home»Cancer»New diagnostic breakthrough predicts which head and neck cancer patients can be cured with surgery alone
    Cancer

    New diagnostic breakthrough predicts which head and neck cancer patients can be cured with surgery alone

    beny13By beny1322 Juli 2025Updated:30 Juli 2025Tidak ada komentar3 Mins Read
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    Researchers from the University of Turku and Turku University Hospital, Finland, led by Docent Sami Ventelä and Professor Jukka Westermarck, have developed a diagnostic tool that can revolutionize the treatment guidance of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.

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    Their study, recently published in EMBO Molecular Medicine, introduces an easy-to-use immunohistochemical assay for detecting the LIMA1-alpha protein, which reliably predicts whether patients can be cured with surgery alone—avoiding the need for harmful oncological treatments.

    Surgery remains a cornerstone in the treatment of solid tumors, including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. However, there has been no clinically available method to distinguish patients who can safely avoid additional therapies such as radiation or chemotherapy. These treatments can cause substantial side effects, additional costs and reduce quality of life.

    The research team’s main findings included analyzing patients with newly diagnosed head and neck squamous cell carcinoma at all five university hospitals in Finland in a prospective clinical study. They found that high expression of the LIMA1-alpha isoform predicted poor survival following surgery, while patients with LIMA1-negative tumors had excellent outcomes without requiring further therapy. Strikingly, none of the LIMA1-negative patients in the prospective validation cohorts died of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma during the two-year follow-up.

    Our findings suggest that immunohistochemical detection of LIMA1-alpha can serve as a reliable and cost-effective tool for identifying patients who could be cured with surgery only and thus spared from the burden of multimodal treatments,” says Ventelä. “This kind of stratification is long overdue and needed in head and neck cancer care.”

    Using antibodies specific to the LIMA1 isoforms, the researchers demonstrated the assay’s prognostic power across retrospective, population-validated tissue microarrays and two independent prospective cohorts. The results were consistent and robust, showing that LIMA1-alpha was the only biomarker to significantly predict poor outcomes in surgically treated patients.

    In addition to clinical data, mechanistic studies revealed that LIMA1 drives epithelial–mesenchymal transition and enhances cancer invasiveness—providing a biological explanation for its link to poor prognosis.

    Currently, only two biomarkers—p16 and PD-L1—are in widespread clinical use for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, and both have serious limitations in stratifying treatment for early-stage disease. This new LIMA1-alpha assay represents the first clinically translatable biomarker for selecting patients who may benefit from surgery alone.

    “We trust that this can mark a turning point in personalized head and neck cancer care,” says Ventelä. “We envision that LIMA1 testing will be incorporated into routine diagnostic workflows in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma to guide treatment planning from the outset.”

    The study offers a promising step toward more personalized and less toxic treatment strategies for patients suffering from head and neck cancer. The University of Turku has applied for patent protection for the findings and based on them, a cancer diagnostics start-up company, Thestra Oy, has been founded, which aims to bring the test to patient use under the EPLINEx brand later this year.

    More information: Xi Qiao et al, LIMA1-alpha staining predicts curative intent surgery response in HPV negative head and neck cancer, EMBO Molecular Medicine (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44321-025-00266-8

    Provided by University of Turku

    This story was originally published on Medical Xpress.

    cancer health healthcare and medicine medical conditions and diseases medicine and healthcare
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