» Articles » PMID: 16170165

Quantitative Methylation-specific Polymerase Chain Reaction Gene Patterns in Urine Sediment Distinguish Prostate Cancer Patients from Control Subjects

Overview
Journal J Clin Oncol
Specialty Oncology
Date 2005 Sep 20
PMID 16170165
Citations 90
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: Aberrant promoter hypermethylation of several known or putative tumor suppressor genes occurs frequently during the pathogenesis of prostate cancers and is a promising marker for cancer detection. We sought to develop a test for prostate cancer based on a quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (QMSP) of multiple genes in urine sediment DNA.

Patients And Methods: We tested urine sediment DNA for aberrant methylation of nine gene promoters (p16INK4a, p14(ARF), MGMT, GSTP1, RARbeta2, CDH1 [E-cadherin], TIMP3, Rassf1A, and APC) from 52 patients with prostate cancer and 21 matched primary tumors by quantitative fluorogenic real-time polymerase chain reaction. We also analyzed urine sediments from 91 age-matched individuals without any history of genitourinary malignancy as controls.

Results: Promoter hypermethylation of at least one of the genes studied was detected in urine samples from all 52 prostate cancer patients. Urine samples from the 91 controls without evidence of genitourinary cancer revealed no methylation of the p16, ARF, MGMT, and GSTP1 gene promoters, whereas methylation of RARbeta2, TIMP3, CDH1, Rassf1A, and APC was detected at low levels.

Conclusion: Overall, methylation found in urine samples matched the methylation status in the primary tumor. A combination of only four genes (p16, ARF, MGMT, and GSTP1) would theoretically allow us to detect 87% of prostate cancers with 100% specificity. Our data support further development of the noninvasive QMSP assay in urine DNA for early detection and surveillance of prostate cancer.

Citing Articles

Role of glutathione-S-transferase gene P1 in the diagnosis of prostate cancer in patients with 'grey level' prostate-specific antigen values.

Stan M, Botnarciuc V, Suceveanu A, Mazilu L, Costea D, Suceveanu A Exp Ther Med. 2022; 24(3):591.

PMID: 35949339 PMC: 9353464. DOI: 10.3892/etm.2022.11528.


Targeting DNMTs to Overcome Enzalutamide Resistance in Prostate Cancer.

Farah E, Zhang Z, Utturkar S, Liu J, Ratliff T, Liu X Mol Cancer Ther. 2021; 21(1):193-205.

PMID: 34728570 PMC: 8742787. DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-21-0581.


The Role of the Metzincin Superfamily in Prostate Cancer Progression: A Systematic-Like Review.

Binder M, Ward A Int J Mol Sci. 2021; 22(7).

PMID: 33808504 PMC: 8036576. DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073608.


DNA methylation signatures of Prostate Cancer in peripheral T-cells.

Mehdi A, Cheishvili D, Arakelian A, Bismar T, Szyf M, Rabbani S BMC Cancer. 2020; 20(1):588.

PMID: 32576165 PMC: 7310561. DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07078-8.


Evaluating liquid biopsies for methylomic profiling of prostate cancer.

Silva R, Moran B, Russell N, Fahey C, Vlajnic T, Manecksha R Epigenetics. 2020; 15(6-7):715-727.

PMID: 32000564 PMC: 7574384. DOI: 10.1080/15592294.2020.1712876.