Genome-wide DNA methylation analysis reveals a prognostic classifier for non-metastatic colorectal cancer (ProMCol classifier)

Author:

Gündert Melanie,Edelmann Dominic,Benner Axel,Jansen Lina,Jia Min,Walter Viola,Knebel Phillip,Herpel Esther,Chang-Claude Jenny,Hoffmeister Michael,Brenner Hermann,Burwinkel Barbara

Abstract

ObjectivePathological staging used for the prediction of patient survival in colorectal cancer (CRC) provides only limited information.DesignHere, a genome-wide study of DNA methylation was conducted for two cohorts of patients with non-metastatic CRC (screening cohort (n=572) and validation cohort (n=274)). A variable screening for prognostic CpG sites was performed in the screening cohort using marginal testing based on a Cox model and subsequent adjustment of the p-values via independent hypothesis weighting using the methylation difference between 34 pairs of tumour and normal mucosa tissue as auxiliary covariate. From the 1000 CpG sites with the smallest adjusted p-value, 20 CpG sites with the smallest Brier score for overall survival (OS) were selected. Applying principal component analysis, we derived a prognostic methylation-based classifier for patients with non-metastatic CRC (ProMCol classifier).ResultsThis classifier was associated with OS in the screening (HR 0.51, 95% CI 0.41 to 0.63, p=6.2E−10) and the validation cohort (HR 0.61, 95% CI 0.45 to 0.82, p=0.001). The independent validation of the ProMCol classifier revealed a reduction of the prediction error for 3-year OS from 0.127, calculated only with standard clinical variables, to 0.120 combining the clinical variables with the classifier and for 4-year OS from 0.153 to 0.140. All results were confirmed for disease-specific survival.ConclusionThe ProMCol classifier could improve the prognostic accuracy for patients with non-metastatic CRC.

Funder

German Research Council

Interdisciplinary Research Program of the National Center for Tumor Diseases (NCT), Germany

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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