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New Marker to Detect Disseminated Breast Cancer Found

by Rishika Gupta on December 22, 2017 at 3:01 PM

Abnormal DNA methylation pattern in EFC#93, a region of DNA can predict the onset of disseminated breast cancer. The findings of this study are further discussed in Genome Medicine journal.


Professor Martin Widschwendter, the corresponding author of the study, said: "For the first time, our study provides evidence that serum DNA methylation markers such as EFC#93 provide a highly specific indicator that could diagnose fatal breast cancers up to one year in advance of current diagnosis. This may enable individualized treatment, which could even begin in the absence of radiological evidence in the breast."

‘Detection of EFC#93 serum DNAme patterns in blood samples offers a new tool for early diagnosis and management of disseminated breast cancers.’

Professor Widschwendter added: "We found that the presence of EFC#93 DNA methylation in blood serum correctly identified 43% of women who went on to be diagnosed with fatal breast cancer within three to six months of giving serum samples, as well as 25% of women who went on to be diagnosed within six to twelve months of giving samples."

DNA methylation is the addition of a methyl group to DNA, which often affects gene expression. Aberrant DNA methylation is common in human tumors, and methylation changes occur very early in breast cancer development.

The authors first analyzed EFC#93 DNA methylation in blood serum samples from 419 breast cancer patients taken at two-time points: after surgery (before the start of chemotherapy) and after completion of chemotherapy. They demonstrated that aberrant DNA methylation in samples taken before chemotherapy was a marker for poor prognosis independent of the presence of circulating tumor cells (cells that have shed from the primary tumor into the blood or lymphatic system and circulate throughout the body).

To assess whether EFC#93 can diagnose women with a poor prognosis earlier (that is, before cancer becomes detectable) the authors further analyzed serum samples of 925 healthy women, 229 of whom went on to develop fatal and 231 of whom went on to develop non-fatal breast cancer, within the first three years of donating serum samples.

Professor Widschwendter said: "The serum DNA methylation marker EFC#93 correctly identified 43% of women from serum tested six months in advance of their mammography-based breast cancer diagnosis who later died from the disease (sensitivity for fatal breast cancer) and also identified 88% of women who did not go on to develop breast cancer (specificity).

"Importantly, EFC#93 did not detect non-fatal breast cancers early. In comparison, mammography screening has a specificity of 88-92% but leads to very substantial over-diagnosis, which means that tumors are detected that would never have caused any clinical symptoms. Subject to further study, using cell-free DNA as a marker, as we have done here, is a promising way of avoiding this issue. "

The authors caution that a lack of appropriate serum samples is a key limitation of this kind of study. Blood samples that are not processed immediately after blood is drawn, or are not collected in special tubes, contain large amounts of normal 'background' DNA leaked by white blood cells, which makes it hard to detect small amounts of tumor DNA.

Professor Widschwendter said: "The normal DNA in these samples usually emits a much stronger signal compared with the short fragments of tumor DNA. Despite the massive contamination of our population-based samples with normal DNA, we were able to observe a clear tumor DNA signal."

According to the authors, clinical trials are now required to assess whether EFC#93 positive women, who do not have cancer that is detectable by mammography, would benefit from anti-hormonal therapy before cancer becomes visible in the breast. Professor Widschwendter's team is currently preparing a large scale population-based cell-free DNA research program which will also help to address this question.

Source: Eurekalert

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