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Clinical utility of whole-genome DNA methylation profiling as a primary molecular diagnostic assay for central nervous system tumors-A prospective study and guidelines for clinical testing.

Authors :
Galbraith K
Vasudevaraja V
Serrano J
Shen G
Tran I
Abdallat N
Wen M
Patel S
Movahed-Ezazi M
Faustin A
Spino-Keeton M
Roberts LG
Maloku E
Drexler SA
Liechty BL
Pisapia D
Krasnozhen-Ratush O
Rosenblum M
Shroff S
Boué DR
Davidson C
Mao Q
Suchi M
North P
Hopp A
Segura A
Jarzembowski JA
Parsons L
Johnson MD
Mobley B
Samore W
McGuone D
Gopal PP
Canoll PD
Horbinski C
Fullmer JM
Farooqui MS
Gokden M
Wadhwani NR
Richardson TE
Umphlett M
Tsankova NM
DeWitt JC
Sen C
Placantonakis DG
Pacione D
Wisoff JH
Teresa Hidalgo E
Harter D
William CM
Cordova C
Kurz SC
Barbaro M
Orringer DA
Karajannis MA
Sulman EP
Gardner SL
Zagzag D
Tsirigos A
Allen JC
Golfinos JG
Snuderl M
Source :
Neuro-oncology advances [Neurooncol Adv] 2023 Jun 26; Vol. 5 (1), pp. vdad076. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jun 26 (Print Publication: 2023).
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Central nervous system (CNS) cancer is the 10th leading cause of cancer-associated deaths for adults, but the leading cause in pediatric patients and young adults. The variety and complexity of histologic subtypes can lead to diagnostic errors. DNA methylation is an epigenetic modification that provides a tumor type-specific signature that can be used for diagnosis.<br />Methods: We performed a prospective study using DNA methylation analysis as a primary diagnostic method for 1921 brain tumors. All tumors received a pathology diagnosis and profiling by whole genome DNA methylation, followed by next-generation DNA and RNA sequencing. Results were stratified by concordance between DNA methylation and histopathology, establishing diagnostic utility.<br />Results: Of the 1602 cases with a World Health Organization histologic diagnosis, DNA methylation identified a diagnostic mismatch in 225 cases (14%), 78 cases (5%) did not classify with any class, and in an additional 110 (7%) cases DNA methylation confirmed the diagnosis and provided prognostic information. Of 319 cases carrying 195 different descriptive histologic diagnoses, DNA methylation provided a definitive diagnosis in 273 (86%) cases, separated them into 55 methylation classes, and changed the grading in 58 (18%) cases.<br />Conclusions: DNA methylation analysis is a robust method to diagnose primary CNS tumors, improving diagnostic accuracy, decreasing diagnostic errors and inconclusive diagnoses, and providing prognostic subclassification. This study provides a framework for inclusion of DNA methylation profiling as a primary molecular diagnostic test into professional guidelines for CNS tumors. The benefits include increased diagnostic accuracy, improved patient management, and refinements in clinical trial design.<br />Competing Interests: M.S. is scientific advisor and shareholder of C2i Genomics, Heidelberg Epignostix and Halo Dx, and a scientific advisor of Arima Genomics, and received research funding from Lilly USA. Other authors declare no conflict of interest.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press, the Society for Neuro-Oncology and the European Association of Neuro-Oncology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2632-2498
Volume :
5
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neuro-oncology advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37476329
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/noajnl/vdad076