CityU’s new blood test technology for accurate detection of cancer cells -Screening in five minutes with accuracy over 90%
[Sponsored Article]
Groundbreaking technology that can accurately perform early screening for cancer cells and effectively monitor disease status has been successfully developed by a biomedical research team at City University of Hong Kong (CityU).
With an accuracy rate of over 90%, the new technology can detect cancer cells with as little as 4 ml of blood in no more than five minutes, currently the fastest screening technology in the world, allowing a patient to know his or her risk of cancer as soon as possible. The new technology can also monitor the effectiveness of drugs used for medical treatment.
Conventional means for cancer diagnosis such as medical imaging and tissue biopsy aren’t accurate enough. Testing blood for protein markers produced by a tumour has a sensitivity and specificity of only around 50 to 60%.
Developed from the “cell manipulation and test platform based on microfluidic chip technology,” the process can accurately identify tumour cells circulating in the blood. Without requiring patients to undergo surgery, the technology can detect tumours as small as 0.1mm in the early stages of cancer, which is three to six months earlier than medical imaging can.
Led by Professor Michael Yang Mengsu, Acting Dean of the Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences and Yeung Kin Man Chair Professor at Biomedical Sciences at CityU, key members of the research team include Dr Henry Zou Heng, Dr Edwin Yu Wai-kin and Dr Xu Tao, all Senior Research Associates in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at CityU.