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Mutation-Agnostic Detection of Colorectal Cancer Using Liquid Biopsy-Based Methylation-Specific Signatures

Mohamed A. Gouda, Dzifa Y. Duose, Morten Lapin, Stephanie Zalles, Helen J. Huang, Yuanxin Xi, Xiaofeng Zheng, Amira I. Aldesoky, Alshimaa Mahmoud Alhanafy, Mohamed Shehata, Jing Wang, Scott Kopetz, Funda Meric‐Bernstam, Ignacio I. Wistuba, Rajyalakshmi Luthra, Filip Jankú

2022The Oncologist11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Detection of methylation patterns in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) can offer a novel approach for cancer diagnostics given the unique signature for each tumor type. We developed a next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based assay targeting 32 CpG sites to detect colorectal cancer-specific ctDNA. NGS was performed on bisulfite-converted libraries and status dichotomization was done using median methylation ratios at all targets. We included plasma samples from patients with metastatic colorectal (n = 20) and non-colorectal cancers (n = 8); and healthy volunteers (n = 4). Median methylation ratio was higher in colorectal cancer compared with non-colorectal cancers (P = .001) and normal donors (P = .005). The assay detected ctDNA in 85% of patients with colorectal cancer at a specificity of 92%. Notably, we were able to detect methylated ctDNA in 75% of patients in whom ctDNA was not detected by other methods. Detection of methylated ctDNA was associated with shorter median progression-free survival compared to non-detection (8 weeks versus 54 weeks; P = .027).

Topics & Concepts

Colorectal cancerMedicineLiquid biopsyMethylationDNA methylationDigital polymerase chain reactionOncologyCpG siteCancerBisulfite sequencingInternal medicineBiopsyCancer researchDNAGenePolymerase chain reactionBiologyGeneticsGene expressionEpigenetics and DNA MethylationCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsRNA modifications and cancer
Mutation-Agnostic Detection of Colorectal Cancer Using Liquid Biopsy-Based Methylation-Specific Signatures | Litcius