Identification of aberrant DNA methylation is a promising tool in prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis and treatment. In this study, we evaluated a two-step method named optimised bias-based preamplification followed by digital PCR (OBBPA-dPCR). The method was used to identify promoter hypermethylation of 2 tumour suppressor genes and in the circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from serum samples of PCa patients ( = 75), benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH, = 58), and healthy individuals (controls, = 155). The PCa cohort was further subdivided into subgroups comprising (I) patients with Gleason Scores (GS) ≤ 7 ( = 55), (II) GS ≥ 8 ( = 10), and (III) patients with metastatic PCa diagnosis ( = 10). We found that methylation levels were significantly increased in all 3 PCa subgroups compared to the controls and BPH cohorts ( < 0.01 for all comparisons). Fractional abundances of methylated DNA fragments were significantly increased in subgroup III of metastatic PCa patients ( < 0.001). methylation analysis was found to be beneficial as a complementary biomarker where further diagnostic validation is most crucial. In combination with free PSA, methylation status helps to identify PCa patients with GS ≥ 8 and grey-zone total PSA values between 2-10 ng/mL. In our study, PCR biases between 80-90% were sufficient to detect minute amounts of tumour DNA with high signal-to-noise ratios as well as high analytical sensitivity and specificity. Both and exhibited strongly increased DNA methylation levels in all metastatic PCa patients. Our data indicates a superior sensitivity of epigenetic biomarker analyses in early detection of PCa metastases that should also help to improve PCa therapy.
About The Expert
Markus Friedemann
Friederike Horn
Katharina Gutewort
Lars Tautz
Carsten Jandeck
Nicole Bechmann
Olga Sukocheva
Manfred P Wirth
Susanne Fuessel
Mario Menschikowski
References
PubMed