Epigenetic alterations in urothelial bladder cancer associated with disease outcomes

Author:

Nunes Francisca Martins1ORCID,Apolónio Joana Dias23,Mota‐Pinto Anabela1,Leão Ricardo1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine University of Coimbra Coimbra Portugal

2. Algarve Biomedical Center Research Institute (ABC‐RI) University of Algarve Faro Portugal

3. Algarve Biomedical Center Faro Portugal

Abstract

ObjectivesBladder cancer (BLCA) is a molecular heterogeneous disease with known genetic distinctive signatures. However, DNA methylation is highly prevalent across a wide range of tumors, suggesting its potential in oncogenesis. Here, we aimed to interrogate the role of nine epigenetic alterations as diagnostic and prognostic markers in BLCA.MethodsDNA methylation, gene expression, and clinicopathological information were retrieved from The Cancer Genome Atlas data portal. Methylation values and gene expression were assessed to determine their association with normal and malignant tissue. Additionally, we studied the association between methylation values and clinicopathological variables. For the prognostic model, Kaplan–Meier Survival curves were generated. Lastly, univariate and multivariate analysis were performed to evaluate the simultaneous impact of methylation and clinicopathological variables on the risk of tumor progression and survival.ResultsNine CpG sites' methylation ‐values involved in our study demonstrated different methylation signatures between normal and malignant urothelium. Hypermethylated CpGs were overrepresented in tumor tissue (p < 0.0001). Opposingly, 4 CpG sites showed lower methylation values in tumor samples (p < 0.0001). Cg12743248high and cg17192862low are risk factors for progression‐free survival, whereas cg12374721high (HR:3.003 (1.283–7.030)) also demonstrated to be the most valuable independent risk factor for disease progression and a risk factor for overall survival.ConclusionsWe have identified that methylated cg12374721 shows promise as a diagnostic and independent prognostic marker in BLCA progression.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology

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