Hydroxymethylation profile of cell-free DNA is a biomarker for early colorectal cancer

Nicolas J. Walker,Mamunur Rashid,Shirong Yu,Helen Bignell,Casper K. Lumby, Carmen M. Livi, Kate Howell,David J. Morley,Sandro Morganella,Daniel Barrell,Shabhonam Caim,Walraj Gosal,Jens Fullgrabe, Thomas J. Charlesworth, Louella Vasquez,Miika Ahdesmaki,Jordan Eizenga,Parul Prabhat,Vitali Proutski,Marie Laurie Murat-Onana, Catherine J. Greenwood, Lisa Kirkwood,Meeta Maisuria-Armer, Mengjie Li, Emma Coats, Victoria Winfield, Lachlan MacBean, Toby Stock, Alice Tome-Fernandez,Yat Chan, Nasir Sheikh,Paula Golder,Michael Steward,Tobias W. B. Ost, Douglas Stewart,Albert Vilella, Mojtaba Noursalehi,Benedict Paten, Debora Lucarelli,Joanne Mason,Gareth Ridge,Jason Mellad,Suman Shirodkar,Shankar Balasubaramanian,Joanna D. Holbrook

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS(2022)

Cited 6|Views38
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Abstract
Early detection of cancer will improve survival rates. The blood biomarker 5-hydroxymethylcytosine has been shown to discriminate cancer. In a large covariate-controlled study of over two thousand individual blood samples, we created, tested and explored the properties of a 5-hydroxymethylcytosine-based classifier to detect colorectal cancer (CRC). In an independent validation sample set, the classifier discriminated CRC samples from controls with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 90% (95% CI [87, 93]). Sensitivity was 55% at 95% specificity. Performance was similar for early stage 1 (AUC 89%; 95% CI [83, 94]) and late stage 4 CRC (AUC 94%; 95% CI [89, 98]). The classifier could detect CRC even when the proportion of tumor DNA in blood was undetectable by other methods. Expanding the classifier to include information about cell-free DNA fragment size and abundance across the genome led to gains in sensitivity (63% at 95% specificity), with similar overall performance (AUC 91%; 95% CI [89, 94]). We confirm that 5-hydroxymethylcytosine can be used to detect CRC, even in early-stage disease. Therefore, the inclusion of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in multianalyte testing could improve sensitivity for the detection of early-stage cancer.
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