Issue cover-dated November 6, 2003
 
* THE REGION: Malaysia—New Premier, New Policies
* CHINA: Why The U.S. Might Block $12B In Trade
* INNOVATION: Winners—Asian Innovation Awards
* MONEY: Health Care—India's Global Ambitions
* CURRENTS: Free Spirits Of Asian Cinema
 

 

  

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ASIAN INNOVATION AWARDS: THE WINNERS 2003: GOLD AWARD

Kids' Cancer Heroes

A Singapore team has invented a simple test for childhood leukaemia that promises safer treatments and higher cure rates for kids in the developing world


By Trish Saywell/SINGAPORE

Issue cover-dated November 06, 2003


 MALAYSIA-BORN ALLEN YEOH was so keen on medicine that his mother sent him to live with his godparents in Singapore so he would have a better chance of entering medical school there. He was just 14 years old. "She was so worried that I would go crazy not doing medicine," recalls Yeoh, now a paediatric oncologist and assistant professor at the National University of Singapore.

That goes for his colleague Limsoon Wong, too. The head of research at Singapore's Institute for Infocomm Research, who holds a doctorate in computer science, was dispatched from Malaysia to Singapore at the same age to enhance his chances of getting into a good university. For the thousands of children suffering from leukaemia in Asia, it's a good thing their parents didn't take any chances.

Yeoh and Wong teamed up to design a revolutionary gene chip-based analysis system that enables doctors to diagnose and better treat acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, the most common type of childhood cancer. Members of their research team include computer scientists Jinyan Li and Huiqing Liu of the Institute for Infocomm Research. The breakthrough won them the Gold Award in the REVIEW's Asian Innovation Awards.

The beauty of their discovery is that it will help doctors refine therapies for the disease by identifying and stratifying the risk profiles of each patient in one simple test. "We have over the last 30 years in Singapore been able to go from curing less than 5% to about 75% of cases of this type of leukaemia," Yeoh explains. "But relapse remains a problem."

Though the diseased leukaemia cells look identical under the microscope, there are at least six different subtypes of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or ALL, that usually have different clinical behaviour and need different therapies. To avoid undertreatment--which causes a relapse and eventually death--or overtreatment--which causes severe long-term side effects from radiation and chemotherapy--it's important to quickly and accurately diagnose the subgroup.

Currently, identifying the various subtypes is an imprecise, expensive process that requires expertise in four different and highly skill-dependent types of laboratory tests. These tests are only available in developed countries, not in hospitals in the developing world.

As a result, children outside the United States and Europe are typically given a standard treatment for the disease that overtreats low-risk patients and undertreats those who have a high risk of relapse. "I wondered if we could have a single test to tell us the same story as all these other tests do and then simplify it and apply it to the developing world," Yeoh says, adding that about 80% of ALL cases are found in the developing world.

Leukaemia is a genetic disease: A mutated gene in the cell's nucleus sends out messages to the cell to make it divide uncontrollably. The gene chip measures the level of various messages that come out from the nucleus of the leukaemia cell. By analyzing the profiles of the different messages in different types of leukaemia, it allows doctors to identify a leukaemia variant based on its message profiles alone.

Yeoh worked on the project at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, a charity hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. He tapped the strength and synergy between clinicians and scientists from St. Jude's, the National University Hospital and the Institute for Infocomm Research. The hospital provided a decade's worth of samples and $1 million for his research.

Wong and his team at the Institute for Infocomm Research then mined Yeoh's data. The results were ready in about two months. "I'm a mathematician and data mining is quite closely associated with mathematics--how to deduce patterns, how to know whether those patterns have sufficient statistical strengths," explains Wong. The discovery by Yeoh and his team will lead to a single, simple and much cheaper way of diagnosing and risk-profiling children. Indeed, his gene chip-based analysis can distinguish high-risk patients who have up to an 80% risk of relapse and low-risk patients with just a 3% risk of relapse.

Another benefit of the test is that kids with less risk of a relapse will not be overtreated with chemotherapy, which has serious side effects including reducing a patient's intelligence level and hormonal changes. "I could see these kids become slower and I could see the frustration of their parents," Yeoh says. "It's very sad. I have a kid that I saw in clinic whose brain had been radiated and [his] mom says, 'He's done well with language but has done poorly at maths and abstracts' . . . The drop in IQ is 10 points. That's not acceptable in Singapore."

What's more, the risk of a second leukaemia-related or treatment-related cancer is significantly higher in children who receive radiation therapy of the brain and spine, Yeoh says. He points out that there's a 2.7% chance of the development of a second cancer if a child does not receive radiation treatment but the number jumps to 23% if a child receives the treatment. In a recent study published in The New England Journal of Medicine, researchers found that the risk of a second cancer was significantly higher in the 597 patients who received radiation therapy than in the 259 patients who did not receive radiation therapy.

That's why the team's gene chip will be so critical in the future treatment of the disease. Yeoh's next project is to use the gene-chip technology to interpret and look into ways to disrupt messages that a leukaemia cell's deranged nucleus is sending out to cause it to become cancerous. If he can do that, he says, he'll be a very happy man. "That's the excitement of research," he says, "to constantly try to improve."
 


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