Circulating cell-free DNA-based methylation patterns for breast cancer diagnosis

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ABSTRACT

Mammography is used to detect breast cancer (BC), but its sensitivity is limited, especially for dense breasts. Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) methylation tests is expected to compensate for the deficiency of mammography. We derived a specific panel of markers based on computational analysis of the DNA methylation profiles from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Through training (n = 160) and validation set (n = 69), we developed a diagnostic prediction model with 26 markers, which yielded a sensitivity of 89.37% and a specificity of 100% for differentiating malignant disease from normal lesions [AUROC = 0.9816 (95% CI: 96.09-100%), and AUPRC = 0.9704 (95% CI: 94.54-99.46%)]. A simplified 4-marker model including cg23035715, cg16304215, cg20072171, and cg21501525 had a similar diagnostic power [AUROC = 0.9796 (95% CI: 95.56-100%), and AUPRC = 0.9220 (95% CI: 91.02-94.37%)]. We found that a single cfDNA methylation marker, cg23035715, has a high diagnostic power [AUROC = 0.9395 (95% CI: 89.72-99.27%), and AUPRC = 0.9111 (95% CI: 88.45-93.76%)], with a sensitivity of 84.90% and a specificity of 93.88%. In an independent testing dataset (n = 104), the obtained diagnostic prediction model discriminated BC patients from normal controls with high accuracy [AUROC = 0.9449 (95% CI: 90.07-98.91%), and AUPRC = 0.8640 (95% CI: 82.82-89.98%)]. We compared the diagnostic power of cfDNA methylation and mammography. Our model yielded a sensitivity of 94.79% (95% CI: 78.72-97.87%) and a specificity of 98.70% (95% CI: 86.36-100%) for differentiating malignant disease from normal lesions [AUROC = 0.9815 (95% CI: 96.75-99.55%), and AUPRC = 0.9800 (95% CI: 96.6-99.4%)], with better diagnostic power and had better diagnostic power than that of using mammography [AUROC = 0.9315 (95% CI: 89.95-96.34%), and AUPRC = 0.9490 (95% CI: 91.7-98.1%)]. In addition, hypermethylation profiling provided insights into lymph node metastasis stratifications (p

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