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Enhanced Performance of DNA Methylation Markers by Simultaneous Measurement of Sense and Antisense DNA Strands after Cytosine Conversion.

Authors :
Jensen SØ
Øgaard N
Nielsen HJ
Bramsen JB
Andersen CL
Source :
Clinical chemistry [Clin Chem] 2020 Jul 01; Vol. 66 (7), pp. 925-933.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Most existing DNA methylation-based methods for detection of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) are based on conversion of unmethylated cytosines to uracil. After conversion, the 2 DNA strands are no longer complementary; therefore, targeting only 1 DNA strand merely utilizes half of the available input DNA. We investigated whether the sensitivity of methylation-based ctDNA detection strategies could be increased by targeting both DNA strands after bisulfite conversion.<br />Methods: Dual-strand digital PCR assays were designed for the 3 colorectal cancer (CRC)-specific methylation markers KCNQ5, C9orf50, and CLIP4 and compared with previously reported single-strand assays. Performance was tested in tumor and leukocyte DNA, and the ability to detect ctDNA was investigated in plasma from 43 patients with CRC stages I to IV and 42 colonoscopy-confirmed healthy controls.<br />Results: Dual-strand assays quantified close to 100% of methylated control DNA input, whereas single-strand assays quantified approximately 50%. Furthermore, dual-strand assays showed a 2-fold increase in the number of methylated DNA copies detected when applied to DNA purified from tumor tissue and plasma from CRC patients. When the results of the 3 DNA methylation markers were combined into a ctDNA detection test and applied to plasma, the dual-strand assay format detected 86% of the cancers compared with 74% for the single-strand assay format. The specificity was 100% for both the dual- and single-strand test formats.<br />Conclusion: Dual-strand assays enabled more sensitive detection of methylated ctDNA than single-strand assays.<br /> (© American Association for Clinical Chemistry 2020.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-8561
Volume :
66
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32460325
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/hvaa100