ESMO Gastrointestinal Oncology (Dec 2024)

DNA methylation markers for sensitive detection of circulating tumor DNA in patients with gastroesophageal cancers

  • N. Øgaard,
  • C.R. Iden,
  • S.Ø. Jensen,
  • S.M. Mustafa,
  • E. Aagaard,
  • J.B. Bramsen,
  • L.B. Ahlborn,
  • J.P. Hasselby,
  • K.S. Rohrberg,
  • M.P. Achiam,
  • C.L. Andersen,
  • M. Mau-Sørensen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
p. 100104

Abstract

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Background: Patients with gastric and gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinomas (G-GEJ ACs) face poor outcomes. Thus sensitive biomarkers for improved clinical management are highly warranted. Detection of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) using DNA methylation biomarkers is a highly sensitive approach for cancer detection and management. Here, we explored the potential of a tumor-agnostic test targeting DNA methylation to detect ctDNA in patients with resectable and advanced G-GEJ ACs. Material and methods: A tumor-agnostic digital PCR test—TriMeth—targeting the gastrointestinal cancer-specific methylated genes C9orf50, KCNQ5, and CLIP4 was carried out on a total of 131 study patients. DNA from surgical tumor specimens of 29 patients with G-GEJ ACs and plasma cell-free DNA from 52 patients with advanced and resectable G-GEJ ACs, and from 50 healthy controls, were analyzed. Results: Methylated tumor DNA was detected by TriMeth in all of the surgical tumor specimens (29/29, 100%). Furthermore, TriMeth detected ctDNA in plasma from 31/52 (60%) patients with G-GEJ AC, including in 13/17 (76%) advanced cases, and 18/35 (51%) resectable cases. ctDNA was not detected in healthy controls (0/50, 0%). Conclusions: This study demonstrates that TriMeth may hold potential as a biomarker for identifying ctDNA in patients with G-GEJ ACs. The study sets the scene for ongoing larger clinical studies investigating the performance of TriMeth in different clinical settings.

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