Raquel Herranz, Julia Oto, Emma Plana, Javier Pérez-Ardavín, Patricia Verger, Manuel Martínez-Sarmiento, César D Vera-Donoso, Pilar Medina
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bladder cancer (BC) is a lethal urological malignancy, with current diagnostic and follow-up methods being invasive and costly. Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in liquid biopsies has shown promise in cancer diagnostics, but its fragmentation and integrity in urine remain underexplored in BC, becoming the aim of this study. cfDNA was isolated from urine of 156 BC patients of most stages and 79 matched controls without renal or bladder conditions. The amount of a large (>250bp) and a nested small (<125pb) fragment of ACTB, AR, MYC, BCAS1 and STOX1 was quantified by quantitative real-time PCR. Fragmentation and integrity (ratio large:small) were analyzed with ordinal logistic regression. The increase in the ratio large:small ACTB fragments and the small fragments of AR and MYC may represent a valuable tool to diagnose and stage BC both when classified as non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive BC or considering grades and stages separately. The small fragment of MYC, leading the effect observed, displayed a valuable diagnostic capacity (AUC=0.7221; 95% CI [0.6527, 0.7915]; P<0.0001; Sensitivity=50%; Specificity=95%) particularly for muscle invasive BC (AUC=0.8098; 95% CI [0.6674, 0.9523]; P<0.0001; Sensitivity=70%; Specificity=97%). Herein, the analysis of urine cfDNA fragmentation and integrity of these surrogate markers is proposed as non-invasive biomarkers to diagnose and stage BC. Once validated, the proposed biomarkers could improve patient management by reinforcing or substituting current invasive and expensive techniques.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, the official publication of the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), co-owned by the American Society for Investigative Pathology (ASIP), seeks to publish high quality original papers on scientific advances in the translation and validation of molecular discoveries in medicine into the clinical diagnostic setting, and the description and application of technological advances in the field of molecular diagnostic medicine. The editors welcome for review articles that contain: novel discoveries or clinicopathologic correlations including studies in oncology, infectious diseases, inherited diseases, predisposition to disease, clinical informatics, or the description of polymorphisms linked to disease states or normal variations; the application of diagnostic methodologies in clinical trials; or the development of new or improved molecular methods which may be applied to diagnosis or monitoring of disease or disease predisposition.