Abstract

Abstract African Americans (AA) have a higher incidence and mortality rate for colorectal cancer (CRC) compared to Caucasians. DNA methylation profiling on normal colon mucosa from 77 CRC patients and 68 patients without cancer (controls) of AA and Caucasian descent identified a distinct subgroup of CRC patients (11AA and 4 Caucasians) who are statistical “outliers” at a large number of CpGs. Such highly epigenetically disrupted CRC patients are termed “Outlier Methylation Phenotype” (OMP). Comparison of methylome profiles of CRC patients and controls revealed that AA CRC patients have greater disruption of the normal colon methylome than do Caucasian patients. A large fraction of the overall methylation differences found between CRC patients and controls is attributable to OMPs. Estimation of epigenetic ages shows that OMPs have lower epigenetic ages compared to their chronological ages. In other words, OMPs undergo epigenetic age deceleration. Comparison of normal colon mucosa transcription profiles of OMP cancer patients with those of non-OMP cancer patients indicates genes whose promoters are hypermethylated in the OMP patients are also transcriptionally down-regulated, and that many of the genes most affected are involved in interactions between epithelial cells, the mucus layer, and the microbiome. Analysis of 16S RDNA profiles suggests that normal colon mucosa of OMPs are enriched in bacterial genera associated with CRC risk, advanced tumor stage, chronic intestinal inflammation, malignant transformation, nosocomial infections and KRAS mutations. In conclusion, our study suggests a distinct epigenetically disrupted OMP group in CRC that are responsible for disrupted methylome, altered gene expression and microbial dysbiosis. Furthermore, a higher frequency of OMPs among African Americans (11/42) than among Caucasians (5/35) may contribute to observed racial disparities in CRC incidence and outcome. Citation Format: Jayashri Ghosh, Bryant M. Schultz, Joe Chan, Claudia Wultsch, Imad Shureiqi, Stephanie Chow, Ahmet Doymaz, Sophia Varriano, Melissa Driscoll, Jen Muse, Frida E. Kleiman, Konstantinos Krampis, Jean-Pierre J. Issa, Carmen Sapienza. Do epigenetic outliers impact racial disparities in colorectal cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 6265.

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