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

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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 ProT M 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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van der Merwe, L., Wan, Y., Cheong, H. J., Perry, C., & Punyadeera, C. (2018). A pilot study to profile salivary angiogenic factors to detect head and neck cancers. BMC Cancer, 18(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-018-4656-3

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