Litcius/Paper detail

Circulating Cell-Free DNA-Based Methylation Pattern in Saliva for Early Diagnosis of Head and Neck Cancer

Natália Birknerová, Veronika Mančíková, Evan D. Paul, Ján Matyašovský, Pavol Čekan, Vladimír Palička, Helena Párová

2022Cancers21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Head and neck cancer (HNC) remains one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide due to tumor diagnosis at a late stage, loco-regional aggression, and distant metastases. A standardized diagnostic procedure for HNC is a tissue biopsy that cannot faithfully portray the in-depth tumor dynamics. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop simple, accurate, and non-invasive methods for cancer detection and follow-up. A saliva-based liquid biopsy allows convenient, non-invasive, and painless collection of high volumes of this biofluid, with the possibility of repetitive sampling, all enabling real-time monitoring of the disease. No approved clinical test for HNC has yet been established. However, epigenetic changes in saliva circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) have the potential for a wide range of clinical applications. Therefore, the aim of this review is to present an overview of cfDNA-based methylation patterns in saliva for early detection of HNC, with particular attention to circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA). Due to advancements in isolation and detection technologies, as well as next- and third-generation sequencing, recent data suggest that salivary biomarkers may be successfully applied for early detection of HNC in the future, but large prospective clinical trials are still warranted.

Topics & Concepts

Liquid biopsyHead and neck cancerSalivaMedicineEpigeneticsCell-free fetal DNADNA methylationBiopsyCancerOncologyPathologyInternal medicineBioinformaticsBiologyGeneBiochemistryFetusPrenatal diagnosisPregnancyGene expressionGeneticsCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsTumors and Oncological CasesEpigenetics and DNA Methylation