Invention: Gene-based breast cancer test
The invention from researcher Laura van ‘t Veer and her team at the Netherlands Cancer Institute (NKI) empowers women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer to make informed decisions about whether or not to undergo chemotherapy after initial surgery.
The team’s gene-based test, introduced in 2007, evaluates tumour tissue for the 10-year risk of cancer recurrence. The novel test has proven a paradigm shift for care providers by identifying high-risk patients who actually require chemotherapy, and low-risk patients who can be spared the potentially damaging side-effects of toxic chemical treatments.
Van ‘t Veer and her team achieved their breakthrough by extensively studying the genetic properties of tumour samples from breast cancer cases, stored in a tissue bank at NKI. This led to the identification of a specific genetic “signature” consisting of 70 genes that determine whether an individual’s genetic profile tested at a low or high risk for the growth of secondary cancers.
Societal benefit
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that around 450,000 women died because of breast cancer in 2011. It remains the most common cancer in women today. Although survival rates have greatly improved over the past decade – currently at 80% or higher in North America, Sweden and Japan – treatment of the disease can take a heavy toll on patients, especially the side-effects of chemotherapy.
Thanks to this invention, patients diagnosed with a low risk of tumour recurrence can forego chemotherapy entirely and still remain disease-free. This is extremely beneficial because chemotherapy is not only costly, but can also put strain on patients, suppressing their immune system, even causing liver damage or organ failure.
Economic benefit
Marketed by van ‘t Veer’s start-up company Agendia NV as the MammaPrint, the team’s microarray test has so far been used by more than 40,000 early-stage breast cancer patients in 34 countries. When patients take the test, providers use a small sample of breast tissue that is sent to Agendia for analysis, and many health insurance providers cover the costs.
Based in Amsterdam and Irvine, California, Agendia is currently ranked among the world’s 14 leading molecular diagnostics firms by revenue, with a turnover of € 9.8 million (US$ 12 million) in 2012. Regarded as a key future technology in the personalised medicine segment, genomic analysis was a € 3.58 billion (US$ 4.4 billion) market in 2011. It is expected to reach € 4.3 billion (US$ 5.2 billion) by 2016.