Τρίτη 29 Μαΐου 2018

Detection of Gastric Cancer with Novel Methylated DNA Markers: Discovery, Tissue Validation, and Pilot Testing in Plasma

Purpose: Gastric adenocarcinoma (GAC) is the third most common cause of cancer mortality worldwide. Accurate and affordable non-invasive detection methods have potential value for screening and surveillance. Herein, we identify novel methylated DNA markers (MDMs) for GAC, validate their discrimination for GAC in tissues from geographically separate cohorts, explore marker acquisition through the oncogenic cascade, and describe distributions of candidate MDMs in plasma from GAC cases and normal controls. Experimental Design: Following discovery by unbiased whole methylome sequencing, candidate MDMs were validated by blinded methylation-specific PCR in archival case-control tissues from U.S. and South Korean patients. Top MDMs were then assayed by an analytically sensitive method (quantitative real-time allele-specific target and signal amplification) in a blinded pilot study on archival plasma from GAC cases and normal controls. Results: Whole methylome discovery yielded novel and highly discriminant candidate MDMs. In tissue, a panel of candidate MDMs detected GAC in 92-100% of U.S. and S. Korean cohorts at 100% specificity. Levels of most MDMs increased progressively from normal mucosa through metaplasia, adenoma, and GAC with variation in points of greatest marker acquisition. In plasma, a 3 marker panel (ELMO1, ZNF569, C13orf18) detected 86% (95% CI 71-95%) of GACs at 95% specificity. Conclusions: Novel MDMs appear to accurately discriminate GAC from normal controls in both tissue and plasma. The point of aberrant methylation during oncogenesis varies by MDM, which may have relevance to marker selection in clinical applications. Further exploration of these MDMs for GAC screening and surveillance is warranted.



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