A high-throughput test enables specific detection of hepatocellular carcinoma

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Abstract

High-throughput tests for early cancer detection can revolutionize public health and reduce cancer morbidity and mortality. Here we show a DNA methylation signature for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) detection in liquid biopsies, distinct from normal tissues and blood profiles. We developed a classifier using four CpG sites, validated in TCGA HCC data. A single F12 gene CpG site effectively differentiates HCC samples from other blood samples, normal tissues, and non-HCC tumors in TCGA and GEO data repositories. The markers were validated in a separate plasma sample dataset from HCC patients and controls. We designed a high-throughput assay using next-generation sequencing and multiplexing techniques, analyzing plasma samples from 554 clinical study participants, including HCC patients, non-HCC cancers, chronic hepatitis B, and healthy controls. HCC detection sensitivity was 84.5% at 95% specificity and 0.94 AUC. Implementing this assay for high-risk individuals could significantly decrease HCC morbidity and mortality.

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Cheishvili, D., Wong, C., Karim, M. M., Kibria, M. G., Jahan, N., Das, P. C., … Al Mahtab, M. (2023). A high-throughput test enables specific detection of hepatocellular carcinoma. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39055-7

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