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Genome-scale screen for DNA methylation-based detection markers for ovarian cancer
Authors:Campan Mihaela  Moffitt Melissa  Houshdaran Sahar  Shen Hui  Widschwendter Martin  Daxenbichler Günter  Long Tiffany  Marth Christian  Laird-Offringa Ite A  Press Michael F  Dubeau Louis  Siegmund Kimberly D  Wu Anna H  Groshen Susan  Chandavarkar Uma  Roman Lynda D  Berchuck Andrew  Pearce Celeste L  Laird Peter W
Institution:Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Abstract:

Background

The identification of sensitive biomarkers for the detection of ovarian cancer is of high clinical relevance for early detection and/or monitoring of disease recurrence. We developed a systematic multi-step biomarker discovery and verification strategy to identify candidate DNA methylation markers for the blood-based detection of ovarian cancer.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We used the Illumina Infinium platform to analyze the DNA methylation status of 27,578 CpG sites in 41 ovarian tumors. We employed a marker selection strategy that emphasized sensitivity by requiring consistency of methylation across tumors, while achieving specificity by excluding markers with methylation in control leukocyte or serum DNA. Our verification strategy involved testing the ability of identified markers to monitor disease burden in serially collected serum samples from ovarian cancer patients who had undergone surgical tumor resection compared to CA-125 levels.We identified one marker, IFFO1 promoter methylation (IFFO1-M), that is frequently methylated in ovarian tumors and that is rarely detected in the blood of normal controls. When tested in 127 serially collected sera from ovarian cancer patients, IFFO1-M showed post-resection kinetics significantly correlated with serum CA-125 measurements in six out of 16 patients.

Conclusions/Significance

We implemented an effective marker screening and verification strategy, leading to the identification of IFFO1-M as a blood-based candidate marker for sensitive detection of ovarian cancer. Serum levels of IFFO1-M displayed post-resection kinetics consistent with a reflection of disease burden. We anticipate that IFFO1-M and other candidate markers emerging from this marker development pipeline may provide disease detection capabilities that complement existing biomarkers.
Keywords:
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