Noninvasive detection of bladder cancer by shallow-depth genome-wide bisulfite sequencing of urinary cell-free DNA for methylation and copy number profiling

THT Cheng, P Jiang, JYC Teoh, MMS Heung… - Clinical …, 2019 - academic.oup.com
THT Cheng, P Jiang, JYC Teoh, MMS Heung, JCW Tam, X Sun, WS Lee, M Ni, RCK Chan…
Clinical Chemistry, 2019academic.oup.com
BACKGROUND The current diagnosis and monitoring of bladder cancer are heavily reliant
on cystoscopy, an invasive and costly procedure. Previous efforts in urine-based detection of
bladder cancer focused on targeted approaches that are predicated on the tumor expressing
specific aberrations. We aimed to noninvasively detect bladder cancer by the genome-wide
assessment of methylomic and copy number aberrations (CNAs). We also investigated the
size of tumor cell-free (cf) DNA fragments. METHODS Shallow-depth paired-end genome …
BACKGROUND
The current diagnosis and monitoring of bladder cancer are heavily reliant on cystoscopy, an invasive and costly procedure. Previous efforts in urine-based detection of bladder cancer focused on targeted approaches that are predicated on the tumor expressing specific aberrations. We aimed to noninvasively detect bladder cancer by the genome-wide assessment of methylomic and copy number aberrations (CNAs). We also investigated the size of tumor cell-free (cf)DNA fragments.
METHODS
Shallow-depth paired-end genome-wide bisulfite sequencing of urinary cfDNA was done for 46 bladder cancer patients and 39 cancer-free controls with hematuria. We assessed (a) proportional contribution from different tissues by methylation deconvolution, (b) global hypomethylation, (c) CNA, and (d) cfDNA size profile.
RESULTS
Methylomic and copy number approaches were synergistically combined to detect bladder cancer with a sensitivity of 93.5% (84.2% for low-grade nonmuscle-invasive disease) and a specificity of 95.8%. The prevalence of methylomic and CNAs reflected disease stage and tumor size. Sampling over multiple time points could assess residual disease and changes in tumor load. Muscle-invasive bladder cancer was associated with a higher proportion of long cfDNA, as well as longer cfDNA fragments originating from genomic regions enriched for tumor DNA.
CONCLUSIONS
Bladder cancer can be detected noninvasively in urinary cfDNA by methylomic and copy number analysis without previous knowledge or assumptions of specific aberrations. Such analysis could be used as a liquid biopsy to aid diagnosis and for potential longitudinal monitoring of tumor load. Further understanding of the differential size and fragmentation of cfDNA could improve the detection of bladder cancer.
Oxford University Press