Predictive Utility of Circulating Methylated DNA in Serum of Melanoma Patients Receiving Biochemotherapy
Author(s) -
Takuji Mori,
Steven O’Day,
Naoyuki Umetani,
Steve R. Martinez,
Minoru Kitago,
Kazuo Koyanagi,
Christine Kuo,
Teh-Ling Takeshima,
Robert Milford,
He-Jing Wang,
Vu D. Vu,
Sandy L. Nguyen,
Dave S.�B. Hoon
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of clinical oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.482
H-Index - 548
eISSN - 1527-7755
pISSN - 0732-183X
DOI - 10.1200/jco.2005.02.9876
Subject(s) - medicine , odds ratio , dna methylation , gastroenterology , oncology , methylation , cancer , gene , gene expression , biology , biochemistry
Purpose Currently, no validated blood-based assays accurately predict treatment response or outcome in melanoma patients. We hypothesized that methylation of tumor-related genes detected in serum DNA could predict disease outcome and therapeutic response in patients receiving concurrent biochemotherapy (BC) for metastatic melanoma.Patients and Methods American Joint Committee on Cancer stage IV melanoma patients (N = 50) had blood drawn before administration of BC. Patients (n = 47) were classified as BC responders or nonresponders. Responders (n = 23) demonstrated a complete or partial response following BC; nonresponders (n = 24) demonstrated progressive disease. Hypermethylation of Ras association domain family 1 (RASSF1A), retinoic acid receptor-β2 (RAR-β2), and O 6 -methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) genes were assessed by methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction.Results Circulating methylated RASSF1A was significantly less frequent for responders (three of 23 patients; 13%) than nonresponders (10 of 24 patients; 42%; P = .028). Patients with RASSF1A, RAR-β2, or at least one serum methylated gene had significantly worse overall survival than patients with no methylated genes (log-rank, P = .013, .021, and .01, respectively). Methylated RASSF1A was the only factor that significantly correlated with overall survival and BC response (risk ratio, 2.38; 95% CI, 1.16 to 4.86; P = .018; odds ratio = 0.21; 95% CI, 0.05 to 0.90; P = .036).Conclusion Detection of circulating methylated DNA in serum can predict response to BC and disease outcome.
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