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All Press Releases for May 3, 2007 Subscribe to this News Feed     Subscribe to this Podcast Feed  
 

Oncolab Outlines Applications for AMAS Test for Cancer as a Chronic Disease at NAAS Conference in San Antonio

At a conference for employment benefit providers, a Boston-based company with an affordable blood test for cancer (based on specific antibody levels) described how its test is being used to diagnose occurrences and recurrences of a wide range of cancer types. Because cancer survival rates are increasing, the disease is increasingly viewed as a chronic condition; the approximately 10 million people in the US who are in remission are understandably concerned about possible recurrence. AMAS, in conjunction with imaging technologies such as MRI and CT, can be a powerful tool to catch cancers early and allow cost-effective treatment.

San Antonio, TX (PRWEB) May 3, 2007 -- At the NAAS annual conference, Dr. S. Winston Bogoch, Chief Operating Officer of Oncolab, Inc., presented his company's antibody-based test for cancer, the AMAS Test, and described aspects of the current healthcare environment which make the test so important.

AMASlogo.jpg

Dr. Bogoch emphasized the impact that his company's test can have on early detection and effective treatment of recurrences or first occurrences of cancer. A preventative approach to cancer, coupling the AMAS test with powerful new imaging and diagnostic techniques that are now increasingly in use, should be a powerful driver to help contain and reduce healthcare costs.

The recent news stories surrounding Elizabeth Edwards and Tony Snow help point out that the diagnosis of cancer, once regarded almost as a death sentence, can increasingly be viewed as a chronic disease. The statistics bear this out - recently, the number of cancer patients and survivors in the US (the prevalence of cancer) reached eight times the number of new cases each year (the incidence of cancer), the latest milestone in three decades of uninterrupted improvement in this statistic.*

The AMAS test, a diagnostic test which tests for circulating levels of a specific antibody, provides a unique tool for monitoring cancer patients in remission. The antibodies bind specifically to a 10,000 molecular weight protein found in a wide range of cancers. Because it monitors an aspect of the body's immune response to cancer, rather than cancer antigens or cancer cells in the bloodstream, the AMAS test is especially accurate early in the recurrence or first occurrence of cancer, when clinical signs of the disease may not be evident or may just be emerging.

Patients in remission after successful cancer therapy, or a healthy normal population, generally have normal circulating levels of the antibody assayed in the test. AMAS's low false positive rate, shown to be 5% in double-blind clinical studies, means that elevated results on the test are highly suspicious for a recurrence or unrelated new occurrence of cancer, and warrant further clinical investigation. While the AMAS test is not generally useful in advanced cancer, its high sensitivity and specificity early in the disease allow it to be used to improve early detection of first occurrence and recurrence of the disease.

The emergence of new imaging techniques such as MRI and CT scans provides a powerful complement to the AMAS test's ability to flag early cancer occurrence and recurrence. With these tools, which are now becoming affordable and widely used, it is often possible to find small malignancies, leading to early and effective clinical treatment. Survival rates for cancers found early are generally much better than for those found later in the disease, and death rates, treatment costs, and productivity losses can be minimized.

  • The number of cancer patients and survivors in the US, 12 million, has quadrupled since 1971, while the annual incidence of new cases, estimated at 1.44 million, represents only a doubling in the same period (during that time, the US population grew from 200 to 300 million and the average age increased, accounting for most of the growth in new cases annually). 5-year survival rates for the most common forms of cancer now generally exceed 50 percent, and can exceed 75 percent in many instances. (Source - SEER Cancer Statistics Review)

A video of the presentation is available at Oncolab's website; contact the company for additional video coverage and peer-reviewed articles about the test.

contact: Gayle Klein, Oncolab Inc.
36 the Fenway, Boston MA 02215
617-536-0850; 800-9CA-TEST; fax 617-536-0657

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CONTACT INFORMATION
Dr. S. Winston Bogoch
Oncolab, Inc.
617-536-0850
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