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Loci-specific differences in blood DNA methylation in HBV-negative populations at risk for hepatocellular carcinoma development

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posted on 2018-06-21, 18:17 authored by Katarzyna Lubecka, Kirsty Flower, Megan Beetch, Jay Qiu, Lucinda Kurzava, Hannah Buvala, Adam Ruhayel, Samer Gawrieh, Suthat Liangpunsakul, Tracy Gonzalez, George McCabe, Naga Chalasani, James M Flanagan, Barbara Stefanska

Late onset of clinical symptoms in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) results in late diagnosis and poor disease outcome. Approximately 85% of individuals with HCC have underlying liver cirrhosis. However, not all cirrhotic patients develop cancer. Reliable tools that would distinguish cirrhotic patients who will develop cancer from those who will not are urgently needed. We used the Illumina HumanMethylation450 BeadChip microarray to test whether white blood cell DNA, an easily accessible source of DNA, exhibits site-specific changes in DNA methylation in blood of diagnosed HCC patients (post-diagnostic, 24 cases, 24 controls) and in prospectively collected blood specimens of HCC patients who were cancer-free at blood collection (pre-diagnostic, 21 cases, 21 controls). Out of 22 differentially methylated loci selected for validation by pyrosequencing, 19 loci with neighbouring CpG sites (probes) were confirmed in the pre-diagnostic study group and subjected to verification in a prospective cirrhotic cohort (13 cases, 23 controls). We established for the first time 9 probes that could distinguish HBV-negative cirrhotic patients who subsequently developed HCC from those who stayed cancer-free. These probes were identified within regulatory regions of BARD1, MAGEB3, BRUNOL5, FXYD6, TET1, TSPAN5, DPPA5, KIAA1210, and LSP1. Methylation levels within DPPA5, KIAA1210, and LSP1 were higher in prospective samples from HCC cases vs. cirrhotic controls. The remaining probes were hypomethylated in cases compared with controls. Using blood as a minimally invasive material and pyrosequencing as a straightforward quantitative method, the established probes have potential to be developed into a routine clinical test after validation in larger cohorts.

Funding

This research was supported by the American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grant (IRG-14-190-56); Showalter Trust Award; and the Purdue University Center for Cancer Research Undergraduate Research Program, granted to BS. JMF and KF were funded by Breast Cancer Now and acknowledge funding support from Cancer Research UK Imperial Centre, The Imperial Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre based at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London. Clinical samples were provided by the Indiana Biobank, a part of the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI).

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