A Large‐scale, multicenter serum metabolite biomarker identification study for the early detection of hepatocellular carcinoma

Ping Luo(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Peiyuan Yin(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Rui Hua(Jilin University), Yexiong Tan(Second Military Medical University), Zaifang Li(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Gaokun Qiu(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Zhenyu Yin(Zhongshan Hospital of Xiamen University), Xingwang Xie(Peking University), Xiaomei Wang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Wenbin Chen(Shandong University), Lina Zhou(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xiaolin Wang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Yanli Li(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Hongsong Chen(Peking University), Ling Gao(Shandong University), Xin Lu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Tangchun Wu(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Hongyang Wang(Second Military Medical University), Junqi Niu(Jilin University), Guowang Xu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics)
Hepatology
September 28, 2017
Cited by 377Open Access
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Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the third most lethal cancer worldwide. The lack of effective biomarkers for the early detection of HCC results in unsatisfactory curative treatments. Here, metabolite biomarkers were identified and validated for HCC diagnosis. A total of 1,448 subjects, including healthy controls and patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection, liver cirrhosis, and HCC, were recruited from multiple centers in China. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolomics methods were used to characterize the subjects' serum metabolic profiles and to screen and validate the HCC biomarkers. A serum metabolite biomarker panel including phenylalanyl-tryptophan and glycocholate was defined. This panel had a higher diagnostic performance than did α-fetoprotein (AFP) in differentiating HCC from a high-risk population of cirrhosis, such as an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.930, 0.892, and 0.807 for the panel versus 0.657, 0.725, and 0.650 for AFP in the discovery set, test set, and cohort 1 of the validation set, respectively. In the nested case-control study, this panel had high sensitivity (range 80.0%-70.3%) to detect preclinical HCC, and its combination with AFP provided better risk prediction of preclinical HCC before clinical diagnosis. Besides, this panel showed a larger area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve than did AFP (0.866 versus 0.682) to distinguish small HCC, and 80.6% of the AFP false-negative patients with HCC were correctly diagnosed using this panel in the test set, which was corroborated by the validation set. The specificity and biological relevance of the identified biomarkers were further evaluated using sera from another two cancers and HCC tissue specimens, respectively. Conclusion: The discovered and validated serum metabolite biomarker panel exhibits good diagnostic performance for the early detection of HCC from at-risk populations. (Hepatology 2018;67:662-675).


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