Abstract

Telomerase reverse-transcriptase (TERT) gene promoter mutations in circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) as well as the levels of circulating microRNA-122 (miR-122) have been reported as potential noninvasive biomarkers for several. This study evaluates the diagnostic performance of potent biomarker-based panels composing of serological AFP, miR-122 and circulating TERT promoter mutations for screening HBV-related HCC. TERT promoter mutations (C228T and C250T) and miR-122 expression were assessed in the plasma samples from 249 patients with HBV-related liver diseases by nested PCR and qRT-PCR assays, respectively. The diagnostic values of TERT promoter mutations, miR-122 expression and biomarker-based panels were assessed by computation of the area under the curve (AUC). Nested-PCR assays were optimized to detect C228T and C250T mutations in TERT promoter with detection limit of 1%. The common hotspot C228T was observed in 22 HCC cases. The triple combinatory panel (AFP@TERT@miR-122) acquired the best diagnostic value to distinguish HCC from CHB (AUC = 0.98), LC (AUC = 0.88) or non-HCC (LC + CHB, AUC = 0.94) compared to the performance of double combinations or single biomarkers, respectively. Notably, among patients with AFP levels≤20 ng/μl, the double combination panel (TERT@miR-122) retains satisfactory diagnostic performance in discriminating HCC from the others (HCC vs. CHB, AUC = 0.96; HCC vs. LC, AUC = 0.88, HCC vs. non-HCC, AUC = 0.94). The triple combination panel AFP@TERT@miR-122 shows a better diagnostic performance for screening HCC in HBV patients, regardless of AFP levels. The newly established panels can be a potential application in clinical practice in Vietnamese setting.

Highlights

  • Telomerase reverse-transcriptase (TERT) gene promoter mutations in circulating cell-free DNA as well as the levels of circulating microRNA-122 have been reported as potential noninvasive biomarkers for several

  • Somatic mutations of TERT in the promoter region and circulating miR-122 have reported as potential noninvasive biomarkers for neoplastic diseases, including liver cancer40,41

  • We developed a PCR assay that could detect TERT promoter mutations from circulating DNA with high sensitivity and established the diagnostic panels with combinatory use of TERT promoter mutations, miR-122 expression and AFP levels for identifying hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected patients

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Summary

Introduction

Telomerase reverse-transcriptase (TERT) gene promoter mutations in circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) as well as the levels of circulating microRNA-122 (miR-122) have been reported as potential noninvasive biomarkers for several. This study evaluates the diagnostic performance of potent biomarker-based panels composing of serological AFP, miR-122 and circulating TERT promoter mutations for screening HBV-related HCC. The triple combinatory panel (AFP@ TERT@miR-122) acquired the best diagnostic value to distinguish HCC from CHB (AUC = 0.98), LC (AUC = 0.88) or non-HCC (LC + CHB, AUC = 0.94) compared to the performance of double combinations or single biomarkers, respectively. The triple combination panel AFP@TERT@miR-122 shows a better diagnostic performance for screening HCC in HBV patients, regardless of AFP levels. Previous studies have reported that TERT promoter mutations were detected in 59–68% of HCC tumor tissues and almost all TERT promoter mutations in HCC (95%) occurred at the first hot spot C228T (−124G > A). The assay for direct identification of TERT promoter mutations from liquid biopsies in HCC have not been described, the blood circulating prevalence of these mutations amongst malignant diseases like HCC has not been well addressed

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