Genomic Analysis of Uterine Lavage Fluid Detects Early Endometrial Cancers and Reveals a Prevalent Landscape of Driver Mutations in Women without Histopathologic Evidence of Cancer: A Prospective Cross-Sectional Study.
Navya NairDmitry RykunovMatthew DashkoffSandra Catalina CamachoCassie A SchumacherJonathan C IrishTimothy T HarkinsElijah FreemanIsaac GarciaElena PereiraSviatoslav M KendallRachel BelferTamara KalirRobert P SebraBoris RevaPeter DottinoJohn A MartignettiPublished in: PLoS medicine (2016)
Using ultra-deep NGS, we identified somatic mutations in DNA extracted both from cell pellets and a never previously reported cfDNA fraction from the uterine lavage. Using our targeted sequencing approach, endometrial driver mutations were identified in all seven women who received a cancer diagnosis based on classic histopathology of tissue curettage obtained at the time of hysteroscopy. In addition, relatively high allele fraction driver mutations were identified in the lavage fluid of approximately half of the women without a cancer diagnosis. Increasing age and post-menopausal status were associated with the presence of these cancer-associated mutations, suggesting the prevalent existence of a premalignant landscape in women without clinical evidence of cancer. Given that a uterine lavage can be easily and quickly performed even outside of the operating room and in a physician's office-based setting, our findings suggest the future possibility of this approach for screening women for the earliest stages of endometrial cancer. However, our findings suggest that further insight into development of cancer or its interruption are needed before translation to the clinic.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- endometrial cancer
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- squamous cell
- single cell
- pregnancy outcomes
- emergency department
- lymph node metastasis
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- adipose tissue
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- cervical cancer screening
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- squamous cell carcinoma
- circulating tumor cells
- genome wide
- circulating tumor