UA Researchers Working Toward Quick Radiation Diagnostic Test

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"In the case of a nuclear event, a lot of people can be radiated. That is why it's so important that we can quickly and accurately assess the absorbed radiation so we can give patients the proper medical treatment as fast as possible," UA assistant profes

"In the case of a nuclear event, a lot of people can be radiated. That is why it's so important that we can quickly and accurately assess the absorbed radiation so we can give patients the proper medical treatment as fast as possible," UA assistant professor Jerome Lacombe said of the importance of his research.

Researchers at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix are attempting to create a better diagnostic test for radiation exposure that potentially could save thousands of lives.

Jerome Lacombe, an assistant professor and researcher at the UA Center for Applied NanoBioscience and Medicine, compiled a list of genes reported to be affected by external ionizing radiation (IR), and assessed their performance as possible biomarkers that could be used to calculate the amount of radiation absorbed by the human body. His study was recently published in the Public Library of Science journal PLOS ONE.

"In the case of a nuclear event, a lot of people can be radiated," Lacombe said. "That is why it's so important that we can quickly and accurately assess the absorbed radiation so we can give patients the proper medical treatment as fast as possible."

Lacombe hopes to develop a radiation test that is less labor intensive and takes only two days for results.

"If you have thousands of people and only two days to screen everyone, it would be almost impossible to do this with the current exposure test," Lacombe said. "With immediate care and the right diagnostics, people could have a better chance of survival."

Lacombe, who worked with researchers from the Columbia University Medical Center and Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station, analyzed published studies from 1978 through 2017 that identified more than 10,000 unique responsive genes in human blood after external IR. Although many studies have tried to correlate gene expression after radiation exposure, their sample sizes have been small because of expense and the time it takes to test the genes.

By combining 24 studies, Lacombe and his team investigated a large data set using a standardized data extraction method and various statistical algorithms to find a list of robust candidate biomarkers. This marks the first time a team has combined all these biomarkers and attempted to run a diagnostic assay to determine radiation exposure, Lacombe said.

"There is no validated signature for biodosimetry (the measurement of biological response for radiation dose)," he said. "There is no validated gene signature to assess the radiation dose. We hope this paper can begin to identify these biomarkers and confirm genes that are radiation responsive."

Other study authors were Frederic Zenhausern, director of the UA Center for Applied NanoBioscience and Medicine; Chao Sima, Center for Bioinformatics and Genomic Systems Engineering, Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station; and Sally A. Amundson, Center for Radiological Research, Columbia University Medical Center.

A version of this article originally appeared on the UA College of Medicine — Phoenix website: http://uahs.arizona.edu/news/ua-researchers-preparing-quick-radiation-diagnostic-test-case-nuclear-disaster

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