Cancers (Apr 2021)

Tumor Long Interspersed Nucleotide Element-1 (LINE-1) Hypomethylation in Relation to Age of Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis and Prognosis

  • Naohiko Akimoto,
  • Melissa Zhao,
  • Tomotaka Ugai,
  • Rong Zhong,
  • Mai Chan Lau,
  • Kenji Fujiyoshi,
  • Junko Kishikawa,
  • Koichiro Haruki,
  • Kota Arima,
  • Tyler S. Twombly,
  • Xuehong Zhang,
  • Edward L. Giovannucci,
  • Kana Wu,
  • Mingyang Song,
  • Andrew T. Chan,
  • Yin Cao,
  • Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt,
  • Kimmie Ng,
  • Marios Giannakis,
  • Juha P. Väyrynen,
  • Jonathan A. Nowak,
  • Shuji Ogino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13092016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 2016

Abstract

Read online

Evidence indicates the pathogenic role of epigenetic alterations in early-onset colorectal cancers diagnosed before age 50. However, features of colorectal cancers diagnosed at age 50–54 (hereafter referred to as “intermediate-onset”) remain less known. We hypothesized that tumor long interspersed nucleotide element-1 (LINE-1) hypomethylation might be increasingly more common with decreasing age of colorectal cancer diagnosis. In 1356 colorectal cancers, including 28 early-onset and 66 intermediate-onset cases, the tumor LINE-1 methylation level measured by bisulfite-PCR-pyrosequencing (scaled 0 to 100) showed a mean of 63.6 (standard deviation (SD) 10.1). The mean tumor LINE-1 methylation level decreased with decreasing age (mean 64.7 (SD 10.4) in age ≥70, 62.8 (SD 9.4) in age 55–69, 61.0 (SD 10.2) in age 50–54, and 58.9 (SD 12.0) in age p Ptrend = 0.0003). Multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios (95% CI) for LINE-1 methylation levels of ≤45, 45–55, and 55–65 (vs. >65) were 2.33 (1.49–3.64), 1.39 (1.05–1.85), and 1.29 (1.02–1.63), respectively (Ptrend = 0.0005). In conclusion, tumor LINE-1 hypomethylation is increasingly more common with decreasing age of colorectal cancer diagnosis, suggesting a role of global DNA hypomethylation in colorectal cancer arising in younger adults.

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