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The Prospect of Using Serum Taurine Level as a Potential Biomarker for Early Detection of Colorectal Carcinoma and Its Correlation With Other Prognostic Markers

The Prospect of Using Serum Taurine Level as a Potential Biomarker for Early Detection of Colorectal Carcinoma and Its Correlation With Other Prognostic Markers

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04192539
Enrollment
116
Registered
2019-12-10
Start date
2017-01-18
Completion date
2018-12-17
Last updated
2019-12-11

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Taurine in Cancer Colon

Brief summary

Serum taurine results in this study showed that, besides CRC biomarkers; it is most attractive, more precious and more accurate early biomarker for early detecting of any malignant change which may led to CRC by other mean it is the most sensitive and more specific tumor marker for CRC. As a result, we can recommend measuring its level regularly with other prognostic tumor biomarkers and screening examination for all people with abdominal and gastrointestinal problems and for precancerous patients as a pre-early biomarker for colorectal carcinoma. So, it needs further studies to confirm that observations on large scale of population as it obvious the small sample size in early stage and lack data due to limited financial resources and it needs more efforts to collect first and precancerous stages patients.

Detailed description

Two-hundred and fifty Egyptian patients (males and females) who attended National Cancer Institute, Cairo university; most of them were referred from private clinics and non-specialized hospitals, complain with abdominal troubles and gastrointestinal problems and bleeding per rectum, after full investigation, clinical examination, biochemical analysis, screening examination according to their cases (Ultra sound, CT or endoscopy either rectal or colonoscopy) and histopathological examination, we choose 'after their approval' one-hundred patients and six which diagnosed as CRC patients aged (19-69 years old) and excluded the others from participated in these studies because they diagnosed as non-colonic diseases like; Irritable colon, Gastroenteritis, Pancreatitis, Liver flexure or Chronic cholecystitis. According to Histopathological architecture, we divided patients to: 1. Inflammatory group number=7. 2. Benign tumor group number=8 which was assessed preoperatively and postoperatively. 3. Malignant tumor group number=91 Lastly, ten health volunteers were enrolled as a frank control. For all included subjects, the measured biochemical analysis were CBC, ALT, AST, Albumin, Total Bilirubin, Creatinine, Blood urea, Sodium, Potassium, CEA, CA19.9 and Taurine.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTTaurine

Serum taurine was determined by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) according to the pre-column extraction and derivatization methodology of McMahon et al. In the present work, we use Shimadzu HPLC model LC-10AT

Sponsors

Ain Shams University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
DOUBLE (Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
19 Years to 69 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Patients complain of abdominal troubles and gastrointestinal problems and bleeding per rectum

Exclusion criteria

Patients refusal,non-colonic diseases like; Irritable colon, Gastroenteritis, Pancreatitis, Chronic cholecystitis

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
serum taurine levels8 months

Countries

Egypt

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026