Non-invasive diagnosis of early-stage lung cancer using high-throughput targeted DNA methylation sequencing of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA)

Wenhua Liang(National Clinical Research Center for Digestive Diseases), Yue Zhao, Weizhe Huang(National Clinical Research Center for Digestive Diseases), Yangbin Gao, Weihong Xu, Jinsheng Tao, Meng Yang, Lequn Li(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Ping Wei(Tongji Hospital), Hui Shen(Van Andel Institute), Xiangning Fu(Tongji Hospital), Zhiwei Chen, Peter W. Laird(Van Andel Institute), Xuyu Cai, Jian‐Bing Fan(Southern Medical University), Jianxing He(National Clinical Research Center for Digestive Diseases)
Theranostics
January 1, 2019
Cited by 279Open Access
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Abstract

Rational: LDCT screening can identify early-stage lung cancers yet introduces excessive false positives and it remains a great challenge to differentiate malignant tumors from benign solitary pulmonary nodules, which calls for better non-invasive diagnostic tools. Methods: We performed DNA methylation profiling by high throughput DNA bisulfite sequencing in tissue samples (nodule size < 3 cm in diameter) to learn methylation patterns that differentiate cancerous tumors from benign lesions. Then we filtered out methylation patterns exhibiting high background in circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and built an assay for plasma sample classification. Results: We first performed methylation profiling of 230 tissue samples to learn cancer-specific methylation patterns which achieved a sensitivity of 92.7% (88.3% -97.1%) and a specificity of 92.8% (89.3% -96.3%). These tissue-derived DNA methylation markers were further filtered using a training set of 66 plasma samples and 9 markers were selected to build a diagnostic prediction model. From an independent validation set of additional 66 plasma samples, this model obtained a sensitivity of 79.5% (63.5% -90.7%) and a specificity of 85.2% (66.3% -95.8%) for differentiating patients with malignant tumor (n = 39) from patients with benign lesions (n = 27). Additionally, when tested on gender and age matched asymptomatic normal individuals (n = 118), our model achieved a specificity of 93.2% (89.0% -98.3%). Specifically, our assay is highly sensitive towards early-stage lung cancer, with a sensitivity of 75.0% (55.0%-90.0%) in 20 stage Ia lung cancer patients and 85.7% (57.1%-100.0%) in 7 stage Ib lung cancer patients.


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