Blood-based DNA methylation markers for lung cancer prediction
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36454Dato
2024-05-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Onwuka, Justina Ucheojor; Guida, Florence; Langdon, Ryan; Johansson, Mikael; Severi, Gianluca; Milne, Roger L.; Dugué, Pierre-Antoine; Southey, Melissa C.; Vineis, Paolo; Sandanger, Torkjel Manning; Nøst, Therese Haugdahl; Chadeau-Hyam, Marc; Relton, Caroline; Robbins, Hilary A.; Suderman, Matthew; Johansson, MattiasSammendrag
Methods and analysis - This study used four prospective cohorts with blood samples collected prior to lung cancer diagnosis. The study was restricted to participants with a history of smoking, and one control was individually matched to each lung cancer case using incidence density sampling by cohort, sex, date of blood collection, age and smoking status. To train a DNA methylation-based risk score, we used participants from Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study-Australia (n=648) and Northern Sweden Health and Disease Study-Sweden (n=380) based on five selected CpG sites. The risk discriminative performance of the methylation score was subsequently validated in participants from European Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition-Italy (n=267) and Norwegian Women and Cancer-Norway (n=185) and compared with that of the questionnaire-based PLCOm2012 lung cancer risk model.
Results - The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for the PLCOm2012 model in the validation studies was 0.70 (95% CI: 0.65 to 0.75) compared with 0.73 (95% CI: 0.68 to 0.77) for the methylation score model (Pdifference=0.07). Incorporating the methylation score with the PLCOm2012 model did not improve the risk discrimination (AUC: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.68 to 0.77, Pdifference=0.73).
Conclusions - This study suggests that the methylation-based risk prediction score alone provides similar lung cancer risk-discriminatory performance as the questionnaire-based PLCOm2012 risk model.