期刊论文详细信息
Genome Medicine
The potential of circulating tumor DNA methylation analysis for the early detection and management of ovarian cancer
Zhen Yang1  Allison Jones2  Andy Ryan2  Andrew E. Teschendorff2  Daniel Reisel2  Martin Widschwendter2  Iona Evans2  Shohreh Ghazali2  Usha Menon2  Tobias Paprotka3  Benjamin Wahl3  Timo Wittenberger4  Tamas Rujan4  Harri Lempiäinen4  Johannes Eichner4  David Cibula5  Michal Zikan5 
[1] CAS Max-Planck Partner Institute for Computational Biology, Shanghai Institute of Biological Sciences;Department of Women’s Cancer, UCL Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Institute for Women’s Health, University College London;GATC Biotech AG;Genedata AG;Gynaecologic Oncology Center, Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, First Faculty of Medicine & General University Hospital, Charles University;
关键词: Cell-free DNA;    DNA methylation;    Serum DNA;    Ovarian cancer;    Early diagnosis;    Screening;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s13073-017-0500-7
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract Background Despite a myriad of attempts in the last three decades to diagnose ovarian cancer (OC) earlier, this clinical aim still remains a significant challenge. Aberrant methylation patterns of linked CpGs analyzed in DNA fragments shed by cancers into the bloodstream (i.e. cell-free DNA) can provide highly specific signals indicating cancer presence. Methods We analyzed 699 cancerous and non-cancerous tissues using a methylation array or reduced representation bisulfite sequencing to discover the most specific OC methylation patterns. A three-DNA-methylation-serum-marker panel was developed using targeted ultra-high coverage bisulfite sequencing in 151 women and validated in 250 women with various conditions, particularly in those associated with high CA125 levels (endometriosis and other benign pelvic masses), serial samples from 25 patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and a nested case control study of 172 UKCTOCS control arm participants which included serum samples up to two years before OC diagnosis. Results The cell-free DNA amount and average fragment size in the serum samples was up to ten times higher than average published values (based on samples that were immediately processed) due to leakage of DNA from white blood cells owing to delayed time to serum separation. Despite this, the marker panel discriminated high grade serous OC patients from healthy women or patients with a benign pelvic mass with specificity/sensitivity of 90.7% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 84.3–94.8%) and 41.4% (95% CI = 24.1–60.9%), respectively. Levels of all three markers plummeted after exposure to chemotherapy and correctly identified 78% and 86% responders and non-responders (Fisher’s exact test, p = 0.04), respectively, which was superior to a CA125 cut-off of 35 IU/mL (20% and 75%). 57.9% (95% CI 34.0–78.9%) of women who developed OC within two years of sample collection were identified with a specificity of 88.1% (95% CI = 77.3–94.3%). Sensitivity and specificity improved further when specifically analyzing CA125 negative samples only (63.6% and 87.5%, respectively). Conclusions Our data suggest that DNA methylation patterns in cell-free DNA have the potential to detect a proportion of OCs up to two years in advance of diagnosis and may potentially guide personalized treatment. The prospective use of novel collection vials, which stabilize blood cells and reduce background DNA contamination in serum/plasma samples, will facilitate clinical implementation of liquid biopsy analyses.

【 授权许可】

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