Discovery could lead to easier ways to diagnose endometrial cancer

Scientists at the College of Medicine – Phoenix published a paper in Clinical Cancer Research that suggests the development of a noninvasive diagnostic for endometrical cancer is possible.

A new study by a highly collaborative team of researchers, biostatisticians, surgeons gynecologic oncologists and basic scientists from the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix, the U of A Cancer Center and Banner Health demonstrated the potential for a minimally invasive, highly accessible diagnostic procedure for endometrial cancer.

Currently, the gold standard for diagnosis of endometrial cancer, the most common form of cancer of the female reproductive organs, is an endometrial biopsy, a form of surgery without the use of a local anesthetic where tissue is removed from the patient for further testing. Though accurate, it is an inconvenient procedure that can be quite painful for the patient.

The barriers to this type of procedure extend beyond the pain and the anxiety it can cause. Access to it is often less available for women without health care and for those who live in rural areas of the state because it needs to be done in a specialized setting. For women who have suffered prior sexual trauma or have other health issues, it may require an operating room.

Those obstacles are “amplified within our underrepresented, understudied, minoritized populations of women, specifically here in Arizona, where Native American women and Latinas have the highest rates of endometrial cancer,” said Melissa Herbst-Kralovetz, PhD, professor of Basic Medical Sciences and Obstetrics and Gynecology as well as director of the Women’s Health Research Program at the U of A College of Medicine – Phoenix.

Herbst-Kralovetz (left) runs a research lab that is focused on understanding the microbiome and host-microbe interactions in the female reproductive tract as it relates to gynecologic and oncologic health outcomes.

Collecting samples via gentle cervicovaginal lavage from more than 190 women with endometrial cancer and non-malignant conditions, the researchers performed global untargeted metabolomics. The data they collected was then used for a multivariate biomarker discovery analysis.

The aims of the study were twofold: To identify potential biomarkers within the cervicovaginal lavages that could be used for detection of endometrial cancer and to further investigate the disruption cancer causes in the local microenvironment.

“Dysregulation in metabolism is one of the hallmarks of cancer. We wanted to learn more about the pathophysiology of endometrial cancer using the sampling technique,” said Herbst-Kralovetz, who is also a researcher with the Cancer Prevention and Control Program at the U of A Cancer Center.

The results were more than promising. The metabolic dysregulation they discovered linked specific metabolites and pathophysiological mechanisms — including cellular proliferation, energy supply and invasion of neighboring tissues.

More promising, their research method was able to detect metabolite levels related to the overall severity the endometrial cancer presents to the patient — as in, the size and grade of the tumor.

“These tumor characteristics could be used as a prognostic tool,” she said. “We could do this non-invasive sampling and then predict what the tumor size is, if there’s myometrial invasion, etc. That’s really important for patient risk stratification as you move forward for treatment.”

The research team’s hope is that the biomarkers will not only improve the acceptability and accessibility of diagnosis but potentially allow a patient to collect the samples themselves. These factors could lead to earlier detection of endometrial cancer.

Unlike most other types cancers that are decreasing in prevalence, incidence rates for endometrial cancer have continued to grow by 1% per year for white women and 2% to 3% for women of all other racial or ethnic groups, according to the American Cancer Society.