New Brunswick introduces liquid biopsy option for lung cancer patients - Action News
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New Brunswick

New Brunswick introduces liquid biopsy option for lung cancer patients

Some New Brunswickers dealing with lung cancer will soon have a new diagnostic tool available to them.

Procedure is less invasive and can be done at regional health-care facilities across the province

A man with grey hair in a grey suit jacket and blue button up shirt speaks into a microphone.
Rodney Ouellette, medical director at the molecular genetics lab at the Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre, says liquid biopsies will make cancer testing more equitable in the province. (Ian Bonnell/CBC)

Some New Brunswickers dealing with lung cancer will soon have a new diagnostic tool available to them.

On Monday, the Department of Health, alongside Vitalit Health Network, ResearchNB and AstraZeneca, announced the availability of liquid biopsies.

"We estimate that it's probably going to be about 100 or so patients per year that will benefit from this," said Rodney Ouellette, medical director at the molecular genetics lab at the Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre in Monction. "In the total lung cancer population, it's a significant number."

Liquid biopsies are done by taking a blood sample from the area surrounding a tumour, and the DNA is analyzed. It's much less invasive thantraditional methods, which involveeither surgery or a needle biopsy.

But traditional biopsies can be difficult with patients who have more health challenges,Ouellette said.

"So in those patients, if time is of the essence and we need an answer in terms of which therapy could potentially work, that's where liquid biopsy becomes a useful tool in the toolkit."

New type of biopsy available for New Brunswickers with lung cancer

8 days ago
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A liquid biopsy, which involves a blood sample, is less invasive than a tissue biopsy for patients undergoing treatment, says Health Minister Bruce Fitch.

The sample can be taken at any regional health-care facility in the province, so patients don't have to travel as far from home. It will then be sent to the Georges Dumont centre for analysis so oncologists can begin working on a treatment plan.

Funding from province, AstraZeneca

Over the 2024-25 fiscal year, the N.B. Department of Health will contribute up to $175,000 toward liquid biopsy testing.

In addition, AstraZeneca will contribute $100,000 to boost testing capacity at the Georges Dumont hospital.

"When we have industry that's doing innovative things, again, putting that together with the research and better patient care, that's a win-win for everyone involved," said Bruce Fitch,the provincial minister of health and MLA for Riverview.

Fitch said the announcement was a great example of different groups working together to help residents.

"This collaboration is what we've been promoting. It's what we've been pushing," he said.

Fitch said one in four cancer deaths in New Brunswick is due to lung cancer, andhe hopes this will improve outcomes.

"Being diagnosed with cancer is a tough situation. So if the treatment and the diagnosis can be a little less invasive with less travel, I think that's going to be a better outcome for the patients."

Years of research

Ouellette and his team havebeen working on the liquid biopsy technology for years, he said. It was already at the point of being validated for clinical use but the COVID-19 pandemic delayed thatwork.

Five people pose for a photo in front of
Representatives at the announcement included Candace Pollack of ResearchNB, Health Minister Bruce Fitch, Rodney Ouellette of the Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre, Ilias Iliopoulos of AstraZeneca and Sylvain Mailhot of the Dumont. (Victoria Walton/CBC)

"So we're glad now that we're back on track and that we're among the first in Canada to offer this," he said.

Ouellette said this will also be important in making sure that all cancer patients in the province, no matter their location or their medical situation, can receive the same type of care.

"Patients that are maybe a little bit sicker, maybe with difficult situations, they can still access these therapies," he said,"because these therapies, they work extremely well."