Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.

Accumulating evidence indicates aberrant DNA methylation is involved in gastric tumourigenesis, suggesting it may be a useful clinical biomarker for the disease. The aim of this study was to consolidate and summarize published data on the potential of methylation in gastric cancer (GC) risk predicti...

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Main Authors: Nur Sabrina Sapari, Marie Loh, Aparna Vaithilingam, Richie Soong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3338684?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d156f9be13c841df93d83cc7d7a632832020-11-25T02:30:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0174e3627510.1371/journal.pone.0036275Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.Nur Sabrina SapariMarie LohAparna VaithilingamRichie SoongAccumulating evidence indicates aberrant DNA methylation is involved in gastric tumourigenesis, suggesting it may be a useful clinical biomarker for the disease. The aim of this study was to consolidate and summarize published data on the potential of methylation in gastric cancer (GC) risk prediction, prognostication and prediction of treatment response.Relevant studies were identified from PubMed using a systematic search approach. Results were summarized by meta-analysis. Mantel-Haenszel odds ratios were computed for each methylation event assuming the random-effects model.A review of 589 retrieved publications identified 415 relevant articles, including 143 case-control studies on gene methylation of 142 individual genes in GC clinical samples. A total of 77 genes were significantly differentially methylated between tumour and normal gastric tissue from GC subjects, of which data on 62 was derived from single studies. Methylation of 15, 4 and 7 genes in normal gastric tissue, plasma and serum respectively was significantly different in frequency between GC and non-cancer subjects. A prognostic significance was reported for 18 genes and predictive significance was reported for p16 methylation, although many inconsistent findings were also observed. No bias due to assay, use of fixed tissue or CpG sites analysed was detected, however a slight bias towards publication of positive findings was observed.DNA methylation is a promising biomarker for GC risk prediction and prognostication. Further focused validation of candidate methylation markers in independent cohorts is required to develop its clinical potential.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3338684?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nur Sabrina Sapari
Marie Loh
Aparna Vaithilingam
Richie Soong
spellingShingle Nur Sabrina Sapari
Marie Loh
Aparna Vaithilingam
Richie Soong
Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nur Sabrina Sapari
Marie Loh
Aparna Vaithilingam
Richie Soong
author_sort Nur Sabrina Sapari
title Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
title_short Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
title_full Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
title_fullStr Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Clinical potential of DNA methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
title_sort clinical potential of dna methylation in gastric cancer: a meta-analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Accumulating evidence indicates aberrant DNA methylation is involved in gastric tumourigenesis, suggesting it may be a useful clinical biomarker for the disease. The aim of this study was to consolidate and summarize published data on the potential of methylation in gastric cancer (GC) risk prediction, prognostication and prediction of treatment response.Relevant studies were identified from PubMed using a systematic search approach. Results were summarized by meta-analysis. Mantel-Haenszel odds ratios were computed for each methylation event assuming the random-effects model.A review of 589 retrieved publications identified 415 relevant articles, including 143 case-control studies on gene methylation of 142 individual genes in GC clinical samples. A total of 77 genes were significantly differentially methylated between tumour and normal gastric tissue from GC subjects, of which data on 62 was derived from single studies. Methylation of 15, 4 and 7 genes in normal gastric tissue, plasma and serum respectively was significantly different in frequency between GC and non-cancer subjects. A prognostic significance was reported for 18 genes and predictive significance was reported for p16 methylation, although many inconsistent findings were also observed. No bias due to assay, use of fixed tissue or CpG sites analysed was detected, however a slight bias towards publication of positive findings was observed.DNA methylation is a promising biomarker for GC risk prediction and prognostication. Further focused validation of candidate methylation markers in independent cohorts is required to develop its clinical potential.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3338684?pdf=render
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