Preventive Medicine Reports (May 2024)

DNA methylation as a triage tool for cervical cancer screening – A meeting report

  • F. Ricardo Burdier,
  • Dur-e-Nayab Waheed,
  • Belinda Nedjai,
  • Renske D.M. Steenbergen,
  • Mario Poljak,
  • Marc Baay,
  • Alex Vorsters,
  • Severien Van Keer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
p. 102678

Abstract

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Introduction: DNA methylation is proposed as a novel biomarker able to monitor molecular events in human papillomavirus (HPV) infection pathophysiology, enabling the distinction between HPV-induced lesions with regression potential from those that may progress to HPV-related cancer. Methods: This meeting report summarises the presentations and expert discussions during the HPV Prevention and Control Board-focused topic technical meeting on DNA methylation validation in clinician-collected and self-collected samples, novel DNA methylation markers discovery, implementation in cervical cancer screening programs, and their potential in women living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Results: Data presented in the meeting showed that HPV-positive, baseline methylation-negative women have a lower cumulative cervical cancer incidence than baseline cytology-negative women, making DNA methylation an attractive triage strategy. However, additional standardised data in different settings (low- versus high-income settings), samples (clinician-collected and self-collected), study designs (prospective, modelling, impact) and populations (immunocompetent women, women living with HIV) are needed. Conclusion: Establishing international validation guidelines were identified as the way forward towards accurate validation and subsequent implementation in current screening programs.

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