Cancers (Aug 2022)

Combined Liquid Biopsy Methylation Analysis of CADM1 and MAL in Cervical Cancer Patients

  • Markus Leffers,
  • Johanna Herbst,
  • Jolanthe Kropidlowski,
  • Katharina Prieske,
  • Anna Lena Bohnen,
  • Sven Peine,
  • Anna Jaeger,
  • Leticia Oliveira-Ferrer,
  • Yvonne Goy,
  • Barbara Schmalfeldt,
  • Klaus Pantel,
  • Linn Wölber,
  • Katharina Effenberger,
  • Harriet Wikman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14163954
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 16
p. 3954

Abstract

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Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women, which is associated in >95% with a high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Methylation of specific genes has been closely associated with the progress of cervical high-grade dysplastic lesions to invasive carcinomas. Therefore, DNA methylation has been proposed as a triage for women infected with high-risk HPV. Methylation analyses of cervical cancer tissue have shown that cell adhesion molecule 1 (CADM1) and myelin and lymphocyte protein (MAL) methylation are present in over 90% of all cervical high-grade neoplasias and invasive cervical cancers. Here, we established a liquid biopsy-based assay to detect MAL and CADM1 methylation in cell free (cf)DNA of cervical cancer. Methylation of the target gene was validated on bisulfite converted smear-DNA from cervical dysplasia patients and afterward applied to cfDNA using quantitative real-time PCR. In 52 smears, a combined analysis of CADM1 and/or MAL (CADM1/MAL) showed methylation in 86.5% of the cases. In cfDNA samples of 24 cervical cancer patients, CADM1/MAL methylation was detected in 83.3% of the cases. CADM1/MAL methylation was detected already in 81.8% of stage I-II patients showing the high sensitivity of this liquid biopsy assay. In combination with a specificity of 95.5% towards healthy donors (HD) and an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.872 in the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, CADM1/MAL cfDNA methylation detection might represent a novel and promising liquid biopsy marker in cervical cancer.

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