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Data from Genome-wide DNA Methylation Analysis of Lung Carcinoma Reveals One Neuroendocrine and Four Adenocarcinoma Epitypes Associated with Patient Outcome

Authors :
Johan Staaf
Maria Planck
Markus Ringnér
Göran Jönsson
Åke Borg
Per Jönsson
Hans Brunnström
Martin Lauss
Mats Jönsson
Anna Karlsson
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: Lung cancer is the worldwide leading cause of death from cancer. DNA methylation in gene promoter regions is a major mechanism of gene expression regulation that may promote tumorigenesis. However, whether clinically relevant subgroups based on DNA methylation patterns exist in lung cancer remains unclear.Experimental Design: Whole-genome DNA methylation analysis using 450K Illumina BeadArrays was performed on 12 normal lung tissues and 124 tumors, including 83 adenocarcinomas, 23 squamous cell carcinomas (SqCC), 1 adenosquamous cancer, 5 large cell carcinomas, 9 large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas (LCNEC), and 3 small-cell carcinomas (SCLC). Unsupervised bootstrap clustering was performed to identify DNA methylation subgroups, which were validated in 695 adenocarcinomas and 122 SqCCs. Subgroups were characterized by clinicopathologic factors, whole-exome sequencing data, and gene expression profiles.Results: Unsupervised analysis identified five DNA methylation subgroups (epitypes). One epitype was distinctly associated with neuroendocrine tumors (LCNEC and SCLC). For adenocarcinoma, remaining four epitypes were associated with unsupervised and supervised gene expression phenotypes, and differences in molecular features, including global hypomethylation, promoter hypermethylation, genomic instability, expression of proliferation-associated genes, and mutations in KRAS, TP53, KEAP1, SMARCA4, and STK11. Furthermore, these epitypes were associated with clinicopathologic features such as smoking history and patient outcome.Conclusions: Our findings highlight one neuroendocrine and four adenocarcinoma epitypes associated with molecular and clinicopathologic characteristics, including patient outcome. This study demonstrates the possibility to further subgroup lung cancer, and more specifically adenocarcinomas, based on epigenetic/molecular classification that could lead to more accurate tumor classification, prognostication, and tailored patient therapy. Clin Cancer Res; 20(23); 6127–40. ©2014 AACR.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d95fa14078e48020e32450805a94751
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.c.6522816.v1