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Ovarian Cancer Biomarkers

 

Head / NAB OCRF Research Fellow

Andrew Stephens

 

L'Oréal Paris Research Fellow

Simon Chu

 

Witchery Research Fellow

Adam Rainczuk



NAB/OCRF Research Nurses

Nicole Fairweather

Dionne Sroczynski

 

Research Officer

Jyosthna Rao

 

Research Assistant

Jessica Gathercole

 

Ovarian Cancer Biomarkers

Andrew Stephens
Laboratory Head
Andrew Stephens PhD
> Profile

 

About this Laboratory

Ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal gynaecological cancers, owing to a lack of recognisable symptoms and subsequent late-stage diagnosis in many cases. Our laboratory is applying proteomics technologies to identify proteins that may be useful in the development of an early stage screening test for ovarian cancer.

 

Related to Research Themes

Cancer , Women's Health 

 

Current Research

  • Circulating markers of ovarian cancer -  We are seeking to identify and characterise cancer-specific proteins circulating in plasma. Technologies being used include multiplexed protein labelling, protein fractionation and mass spectrometry. Ongoing work includes identification and validation studies for development of a screening test to detect early-stage cancers.

  • Auto-immune response in cancer patients -  Cancer patients exhibit an immune response to their tumours at the earliest stages of progression – often before clinical symptoms are apparent. We have developed a platform to isolate and identify auto-antigenic proteins directly from patient plasma. Studies are ongoing to identify and characterise such proteins as specific markers of the early stages of tumour formation.

  • Nanoparticle technology for the identification of novel cancer markers -  Our team has developed a novel nanoparticle technology which is being applied to samples such as human plasma, urine and cell extracts to capture and comparatively analyse small proteins as potential cancer markers.

  • Fallopian tube as the origin of epithelial ovarian cancers - Recent evidence suggests that many epithelial-type ovarian tumours may arise on the fimbriae of the fallopian tubes. We are establishing fallopian tube cell lines to investigate the molecular biology behind this phenomenon.