DNA Methylation Research in Autologous Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Population

Author:

Mohanraj Lathika1ORCID,Lapato Dana M.2,Toor Amir3,Swift-Scanlan Theresa4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Adult Health and Nursing Systems, VCU School of Nursing, Richmond, VA, USA

2. Department of Human and Molecular Genetics, VCU School of Medicine, Richmond, VA, USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine, VCU School of Medicine, Richmond, VA, USA

4. Endowed Professor and Director, Biobehavioral Research Lab, VCU School of Nursing, Richmond, VA, USA

Abstract

Despite increased sophistication in DNA methylation (DNAm) measurement and methods, conducting studies in specific populations such as the hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) population, presents unique challenges and study design considerations. In this article, we explain the motivation for investigating DNAm in the HCT population, highlighting important study design features and key findings in a longitudinal prospective pilot study of DNAm in 32 patients undergoing autologous HCT in Central Virginia, USA. We also discuss limitations and challenges to generating robust results. We observed that HCT does not prevent high-quality DNA from being extracted from whole blood for DNAm research and that longitudinal prospective studies that span pre- and 2-months post-HCT are feasible. Critically, we did not observe significant impacts of cancer diagnosis, time since transplant, age, or chromosomal sex on overall DNAm data dimensionality. These observations demonstrate that while extreme care is required to ensure generalizable, accurate, and interpretable results, researchers should not avoid HCT-DNAm research simply for fear that the transplant procedure or presence of a cancer diagnosis will prevent meaningful conclusions from being drawn. DNAm is an attractive biomarker that is understudied in patients undergoing HCT and needs to expand to improve precise prediction of HCT outcomes.

Funder

Virginia Commonwealth University Presidential Research Quest Fund

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Research and Theory

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