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DNA methylation marker to estimate the breast cancer cell fraction in DNA samples.

Hiroki IshiharaSatoshi YamashitaSatoshi FujiiKazunari TanabeHirofumi MukaiToshikazu Ushijima
Published in: Medical oncology (Northwood, London, England) (2018)
Estimation of the cancer cell fraction in breast cancer tissue is important for exclusion of samples unsuitable for multigene prognostic assays and a variety of molecular analyses for research. Here, we aimed to establish a breast cancer cell fraction marker based on DNA methylation. First, we screened genes unmethylated in non-cancerous mammary tissues and methylated in breast cancer tissues using microarray data from the TCGA database, and isolated 12 genes. Among them, four genes were selected as candidate marker genes without a high incidence of copy number alterations and with broad coverage across patients. Bisulfite pyrosequencing analysis of additional breast cancer biopsy specimens purified by laser capture microdissection (LCM) excluded two genes, and a combination of SIM1 and CCDC181 was finally selected as a fraction marker. In further additional specimens without LCM purification, the fraction marker was substantially methylated (≥ 20%) with high incidence (50/51). The cancer cell fraction estimated by the fraction marker was significantly correlated with that estimated by microscopic examination (p < 0.0001). Performance of a previously established marker, HSD17B4 methylation, which predicts therapeutic response of HER2-positive breast cancer to trastuzumab, was improved after the correction of cancer cell fraction by the fraction marker. In conclusion, we successfully established a breast cancer cell fraction marker based on DNA methylation.
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