» Articles » PMID: 36001862

A Simple Cervicovaginal Epigenetic Test for Screening and Rapid Triage of Women With Suspected Endometrial Cancer: Validation in Several Cohort and Case/Control Sets

Abstract

Purpose: Endometrial cancer (EC) incidence has been rising over the past 10 years. Delays in diagnosis reduce survival and necessitate more aggressive treatment. We aimed to develop and validate a simple, noninvasive, and reliable triage test for EC to reduce the number of invasive diagnostic procedures and improve patient survival.

Methods: We developed a test to screen and triage women with suspected EC using 726 cervical smear samples from women with and without EC, and validated the test in 562 cervicovaginal samples using three different collection methods (cervical smear: n = 248; vaginal swab: n = 63; and self-collection: n = 251) and four different settings (case/control: n = 388; cohort of women presenting with postmenopausal bleeding: n = 63; a cohort of high-risk women with Lynch syndrome: n = 25; and a nested case/control setting from a screening cohort and samples taken up to 3 years before EC diagnosis: n = 86).

Results: We describe the omen's cancer risk entification - uantitative polymerase chain reaction test for ndometrial ancer (WID-qEC), a three-marker test that evaluates DNA methylation in gene regions of and . In cervical, self-collected, and vaginal swab samples derived from symptomatic patients, it detected EC with sensitivities of 97.2% (95% CI, 90.2 to 99.7), 90.1% (83.6 to 94.6), and 100% (63.1 to 100), respectively, and specificities of 75.8% (63.6 to 85.5), 86.7% (79.3 to 92.2), and 89.1% (77.8 to 95.9), respectively. The WID-qEC identified 90.9% (95% CI, 70.8 to 98.9) of EC cases in samples predating diagnosis up to 1 year. Test performance was similar across menopausal status, age, stage, grade, ethnicity, and histology.

Conclusion: The WID-qEC is a noninvasive reliable test for triage of women with symptoms suggestive of ECs. Because of the potential for self-collection, it could improve early diagnosis and reduce the reliance for in-person visits.

Citing Articles

Unveiling DNA methylation: early diagnosis, risk assessment, and therapy for endometrial cancer.

Li M, Xia Z, Wang R, Xi M, Hou M Front Oncol. 2025; 14:1455255.

PMID: 39902129 PMC: 11788147. DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2024.1455255.


Research Progress of DNA Methylation Markers for Endometrial Carcinoma Diagnosis.

Zheng H, Yu C, Yang L, Zhou F, Liu A J Cancer. 2025; 16(3):812-820.

PMID: 39781343 PMC: 11705058. DOI: 10.7150/jca.104214.


Performance of the WID-qEC test to detect uterine cancers in black women with abnormal uterine bleeding: A prospective observational cohort study in Ghana.

Ken-Amoah S, Redl E, Domson B, Barrett J, Schreiberhuber L, Herzog C Int J Cancer. 2024; 156(5):1055-1064.

PMID: 39655721 PMC: 11701417. DOI: 10.1002/ijc.35260.


Minimally Invasive and Emerging Diagnostic Approaches in Endometrial Cancer: Epigenetic Insights and the Promise of DNA Methylation.

Porcaro F, Paolucci A, Porcaro P, Cardinale G, Romitelli A, Cozzolino D Diagnostics (Basel). 2024; 14(22).

PMID: 39594241 PMC: 11592808. DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics14222575.


A Multicenter Cohort Study on DNA Methylation for Endometrial Cancer Detection in Cervical Scrapings.

Ma X, Chen X, Liang J, Zhang J, Wu Q, Wang D Cancer Med. 2024; 13(21):e70361.

PMID: 39487683 PMC: 11530713. DOI: 10.1002/cam4.70361.


References
1.
Barrett J, Herzog C, Jones A, Leavy O, Evans I, Knapp S . The WID-BC-index identifies women with primary poor prognostic breast cancer based on DNA methylation in cervical samples. Nat Commun. 2022; 13(1):449. PMC: 8807602. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-27918-w. View

2.
Klein E, Richards D, Cohn A, Tummala M, Lapham R, Cosgrove D . Clinical validation of a targeted methylation-based multi-cancer early detection test using an independent validation set. Ann Oncol. 2021; 32(9):1167-1177. DOI: 10.1016/j.annonc.2021.05.806. View

3.
Sundar S, Balega J, Crosbie E, Drake A, Edmondson R, Fotopoulou C . BGCS uterine cancer guidelines: Recommendations for practice. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2017; 213:71-97. DOI: 10.1016/j.ejogrb.2017.04.015. View

4.
Huang R, Su P, Liao Y, Wu T, Hsu Y, Lin W . Integrated Epigenomics Analysis Reveals a DNA Methylation Panel for Endometrial Cancer Detection Using Cervical Scrapings. Clin Cancer Res. 2016; 23(1):263-272. DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-16-0863. View

5.
Bakkum-Gamez J, Wentzensen N, Maurer M, Hawthorne K, Voss J, Kroneman T . Detection of endometrial cancer via molecular analysis of DNA collected with vaginal tampons. Gynecol Oncol. 2015; 137(1):14-22. PMC: 4380654. DOI: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2015.01.552. View