Abstract

BackgroundThere are currently no screening tests in routine use for oral and pharyngeal cancer beyond visual inspection and palpation, which are provided on an opportunistic basis, indicating a need for development of novel methods for early detection, particularly in high-risk populations. We sought to address this need through comprehensive interrogation of CpG island methylation in oral rinse samples.MethodsWe used the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadArray to interrogate DNA methylation in oral rinse samples collected from 154 patients with incident oral or pharyngeal carcinoma prior to treatment and 72 cancer-free control subjects. Subjects were randomly allocated to either a training or a testing set. For each subject, average methylation was calculated for each CpG island represented on the array. We applied a semi-supervised recursively partitioned mixture model to the CpG island methylation data to identify a classifier for prediction of case status in the training set. We then applied the resultant classifier to the testing set for validation and to assess the predictive accuracy.ResultsWe identified a methylation classifier comprised of 22 CpG islands, which predicted oral and pharyngeal carcinoma with a high degree of accuracy (AUC = 0.92, 95 % CI 0.86, 0.98).ConclusionsThis novel methylation panel is a strong predictor of oral and pharyngeal carcinoma case status in oral rinse samples and may have utility in early detection and post-treatment follow-up.

Highlights

  • There are currently no screening tests in routine use for oral and pharyngeal cancer beyond visual inspection and palpation, which are provided on an opportunistic basis, indicating a need for development of novel methods for early detection, in high-risk populations

  • deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation was interrogated in the oral rinse samples using the Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadArray (Illumina, San Diego, CA), which contains probes for more than 450,000 cytosine-guanine dinucleotide (CpG) loci across 99 % of annotated human genes

  • We have identified a CpG island methylation classifier that can be used with oral rinse samples for predicting incident oral and pharyngeal carcinoma with a high degree of accuracy

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Summary

Introduction

There are currently no screening tests in routine use for oral and pharyngeal cancer beyond visual inspection and palpation, which are provided on an opportunistic basis, indicating a need for development of novel methods for early detection, in high-risk populations. Oral and pharyngeal cancer are major public health concerns in the USA, where there were an estimated 42,440 new cases of oral and pharyngeal cancer diagnoses (it is the eighth most common form of cancer in men) and 8390 deaths in 2014 [1]. This problem is even more pronounced on the global scale, with 442,760 incident cases and 241,458 deaths worldwide in 2012 [2]; rates are high in parts of Western Europe, Southeast Asia, and Oceania. Methylation of CpG islands can arise aberrantly during disease development and progression [6] but can occur as part of normal biological processes, such as X-inactivation, imprinting [5], or tissue differentiation [10,11,12,13,14]

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