Cancers (Oct 2019)

Diagnostic and Prognostic Value of <i>B4GALT1</i> Hypermethylation and Its Clinical Significance as a Novel Circulating Cell-Free DNA Biomarker in Colorectal Cancer

  • Francesco Picardo,
  • Antonella Romanelli,
  • Laura Muinelo-Romay,
  • Tommaso Mazza,
  • Caterina Fusilli,
  • Paola Parrella,
  • Jorge Barbazán,
  • Rafael Lopez-López,
  • Raffaela Barbano,
  • Mariangela De Robertis,
  • Chiara Taffon,
  • Veronica Bordoni,
  • Chiara Agrati,
  • Manuela Costantini,
  • Francesca Ricci,
  • Paolo Graziano,
  • Evaristo Maiello,
  • Lucia Anna Muscarella,
  • Vito Michele Fazio,
  • Maria Luana Poeta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11101598
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 1598

Abstract

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Epigenetic modifications of glyco-genes have been documented in different types of cancer and are tightly linked to proliferation, invasiveness, metastasis, and drug resistance. This study aims to investigate the diagnostic, prognostic, and therapy-response predictive value of the glyco-gene B4GALT1 in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. A Kaplan−Meier analysis was conducted in 1418 CRC patients (GEO and TCGA datasets) to assess the prognostic and therapy-response predictive values of the aberrant expression and methylation status of B4GALT1. Quantitative methylation-specific PCR (QMSP) and droplet digital quantitative methylation-specific PCR (dd-QMSP) were respectively used to detect hypermethylated B4GALT1 in metastasis and plasma in four cohorts of metastatic CRC cases (mCRC). Both the downregulated expression and promoter hypermethylation of B4GALT1 have a negative prognostic impact on CRC. Interestingly a low expression level of B4GALT1 was significantly associated with poor cetuximab response (progression-free survival (PFS) p = 0.01) particularly in wild-type (WT)-KRAS patients (p = 0.03). B4GALT1 promoter was aberrantly methylated in liver and lung metastases. The detection of hypermethylated B4GALT1 in plasma of mCRC patients showed a highly discriminative receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve profile (area under curve (AUC) value 0.750; 95% CI: 0.592−0.908, p = 0.008), clearly distinguishing mCRC patients from healthy controls. Based on an optimal cut-off value defined by the ROC analysis, B4GALT1 yield a 100% specificity and a 50% sensitivity. These data support the potential value of B4GALT1 as an additional novel biomarker for the prediction of cetuximab response, and as a specific and sensitive diagnostic circulating biomarker that can be detected in CRC.

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