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Serological Thymidine Kinase 1 is a Biomarker for Early Detection of Tumours—A Health Screening Study on 35,365 People, Using a Sensitive Chemiluminescent Dot Blot Assay

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TLDR
It is concluded that serological TK1 protein concentration is a reliable marker for risk assessment of pre/early cancerous progression.
Abstract
Serological thymidine kinase 1 (STK1) is a reliable proliferation marker for prognosis, monitoring tumour therapy, and relapse. Here we investigated the use of STK1 in health screening for early detection of pre-malignant and malignant diseases. The investigation was based on 35,365 participants in four independent health screening studies in China between 2005-2011. All participants were clinically examined. The concentration of STK1 was determined by a sensitive chemiluminescent dot blot ECL assay. The ROCvalue of the STK1 assay was 0.96. At a cut-off STK1 value of 2.0 pM, the likelihood (+) value was 236.5, and the sensitivity and the specificity were 0.78 and 0.99, respectively. The relative number of city-dwelling people with elevated STK1 values (≥2.0 pM) was 0.8% (198/26,484), while the corresponding value for the group of oil-field workers was 5.8% (514/8,355). The latter group expressed significantly higher frequency of refractory anaemia, fatty liver, and obesity, compared to the city dwellers, but no cases of breast hyperplasia or prostate hyperplasia. Furthermore, people working in oil drilling/oil transportation showed higher STK1 values and higher frequency of pre-malignancies and benign diseases than people working in the oil-field administration. In the STK1 elevated group of the city-dwelling people, a statistically significantly higher number of people were found to have malignancies, pre-malignancies of all types, moderate/severe type of hyperplasia of breast or prostate, or refractory anaemia, or to be at high risk for hepatitis B, compared to people with normal STK1 values (<2.0 pM). No malignancies were found in the normal STK1 group. In the elevated STK1 group 85.4% showed diseases linked to a higher risk for pre-/early cancerous progression, compared to 52.4% of those with normal STK1 values. Among participants with elevated STK1 values, 8.8% developed new malignancies or progress in their pre-malignancies within 5 to 72 months, compared to 0.2% among people with normal STK1 values. People who showed elevated STK1 values were at about three to five times higher risk to develop malignancies compared to a calculated risk based on a cancer incidence rate of 0.2-0.3%. We conclude that serological TK1 protein concentration is a reliable marker for risk assessment of pre/early cancerous progression.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Thymidine kinase 1 combined with CEA, CYFRA21-1 and NSE improved its diagnostic value for lung cancer

TL;DR: The ROC curve analyses showed that the diagnostic value of TK1 combined with CEA, CYFRA21‐1 and NSE in lung cancer was significantly higher than that of each biomarker alone (all P < 0.0001).
Journal ArticleDOI

The proliferation marker thymidine kinase 1 in clinical use (Review)

TL;DR: Thymidine kinase 1 (TK1), a cell cycle-dependent and thus a proliferation-related marker, has been extensively studied during the last decades and is an emerging potential proliferating biomarker in oncology that may be used for the prognosis and monitoring of tumor therapy, relapse and survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

General and Systematic Pathology

TL;DR: The strength of this book lies in practical guidance given on diagnostic neuropathology, r necropsy techniques, selection ne cropsy, brain inspection ar block selection, staining techni tological interpretation and d text is remarkably comprehensi plemented by useful additiona and by reference to curr guidelines-for example, for necropsies cases.
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Thymidine kinase 1 through the ages: a comprehensive review.

TL;DR: Compared to other proliferation markers, TK1 levels during S phase more accurately determine the rate of DNA synthesis in actively dividing tumors, and is potentially more advantageous than current biomarkers.
References
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Obesity and Cancer

TL;DR: The article examines the importance of managing weight to reduce risk for developing cancer and for survival among cancer patients and presents a set of strategies that can be useful to guide clinical advice to patients for whom weight control is an important adjunct to risk management or to improve quality of life and disease-free survival after diagnosis.
Journal Article

Estimates of Cancer Incidence in China for 2000 and Projections for 2005

TL;DR: The rising rates of lung cancer incidence (in both sexes and breast cancer) mean that there will be much greater increases in the number of cases at these two sites, and these two cancers are now the priorities for cancer prevention, early detection, and therapy in China.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnesium, inflammation, and obesity in chronic disease

TL;DR: Marginal-to-moderate magnesium deficiency through exacerbating chronic inflammatory stress may be contributing significantly to the occurrence of chronic diseases such as atherosclerosis, hypertension, osteoporosis, diabetes mellitus, and cancer.
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Lobular neoplasia: Long term risk of breast cancer and relation to other factors

TL;DR: Factors that influence the cancer risk in LN patients are investigated to find out whether patients are predisposed to develop invasive or intraductal carcinoma.
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