ZNF671 DNA methylation as a molecular predictor for the early recurrence of serous ovarian cancer

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Abstract

Serous ovarian cancer is the most frequent type of epithelial ovarian cancer. Despite the use of surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy, many patients suffer from recurrence within 6 months, termed platinum resistance. Currently, the lack of relevant molecular biomarkers for the prediction of the early recurrence of serous ovarian cancers is linked to the poor prognosis. To identify an effective biomarker for early recurrence, we analyzed the genome-wide DNA methylation status characteristic of early recurrence after treatment. The patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset who showed a complete response after the first therapy were categorized into 2 groups: early recurrence serous ovarian cancer (ERS, recurrence ≤12 months, n = 51) and late recurrence serous ovarian cancer (LRS, recurrence >12 months, n = 158). Among the 12 differently methylated probes identified between the 2 groups, we found that ZNF671 was the most significantly methylated gene in the early recurrence group. A validation cohort of 78 serous ovarian cancers showed that patients with ZNF671 DNA methylation had a worse prognosis (P

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Mase, S., Shinjo, K., Totani, H., Katsushima, K., Arakawa, A., Takahashi, S., … Kondo, Y. (2019). ZNF671 DNA methylation as a molecular predictor for the early recurrence of serous ovarian cancer. Cancer Science, 110(3), 1105–1116. https://doi.org/10.1111/cas.13936

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