Investigator

Charlotte Proudhon

INSERM scientist, Group leader - Team Circulating EpiMarkers · Irest - INSERM U1085

CPCharlotte Proudhon
Papers(2)
Noninvasive Multicanc…High-Accuracy Determi…
Collaborators(10)
Marc-Henri SternChristophe Le TourneauConstance LamyDavid GentienFrançois-Clément Bida…Ivan BiècheJean-Yves PiergaKlaus von GrafensteinKévin Da SilvaLuc Cabel
Institutions(3)
Universit Paris Scien…Institut CurieCole Des Hautes Tudes…

Papers

Noninvasive Multicancer Detection Using DNA Hypomethylation of LINE-1 Retrotransposons

Abstract Purpose: The detection of ctDNA, which allows noninvasive tumor molecular profiling and disease follow-up, promises optimal and individualized management of patients with cancer. However, detecting small fractions of tumor DNA released when the tumor burden is reduced remains a challenge. Experimental Design: We implemented a new, highly sensitive strategy to detect bp resolution methylation patterns from plasma DNA and assessed the potential of hypomethylation of long interspersed nuclear element-1 retrotransposons as a noninvasive multicancer detection biomarker. The Detection of Long Interspersed Nuclear Element Altered Methylation ON plasma DNA method targets 30 to 40,000 young long interspersed nuclear element-1 retrotransposons scattered throughout the genome, covering about 100,000 CpG sites and is based on a reference-free analysis pipeline. Results: Resulting machine learning–based classifiers showed powerful correct classification rates discriminating healthy and tumor plasmas from six types of cancers (colorectal, breast, lung, ovarian, and gastric cancers and uveal melanoma, including localized stages) in two independent cohorts (AUC = 88%–100%, N = 747). The Detection of Long Interspersed Nuclear Element Altered Methylation ON plasma DNA method can also be used to perform copy number alteration analysis that improves cancer detection. Conclusions: This should lead to the development of more efficient noninvasive diagnostic tests adapted to all patients with cancer, based on the universality of these factors. See related commentary by Szymanski et al., p. 1179

High-Accuracy Determination of Microsatellite Instability Compatible with Liquid Biopsies

AbstractBackgroundMicrosatellite instability (MSI) has recently emerged as a predictive pan-tumor biomarker of immunotherapy efficacy, stimulating the development of diagnostic tools compatible with large-scale screening of patients. In this context, noninvasive detection of MSI from circulating tumor DNA stands as a promising diagnostic and posttreatment monitoring tool.MethodsWe developed drop-off droplet-digital PCR (ddPCR) assays targeting BAT-26, activin A receptor type 2A (ACVR2A), and defensin beta 105A/B (DEFB105A/B) microsatellite markers. Performances of the assays were measured on reconstitution experiments of various mutant allelic fractions, on 185 tumor samples with known MSI status, and on 72 blood samples collected from 42 patients with advanced colorectal or endometrial cancers before and/or during therapy.ResultsThe 3 ddPCR assays reached analytical sensitivity <0.1% variant allelic frequency and could reliably detect and quantify MSI in both tumor and body fluid samples. High concordance between MSI status determination by the three-marker ddPCR test and the reference pentaplex method were observed (100% for colorectal tumors and 93% for other tumor types). Moreover, the 3 assays showed correlations with r ≥ 0.99 with other circulating tumor DNA markers and their dynamic during treatment correlated well with clinical response.ConclusionsThis innovative approach for MSI detection provides a noninvasive, cost-effective, and fast diagnostic tool, well suited for large-scale screening of patients that may benefit from immunotherapy agents, as well as for monitoring treatment responses.

45Works
2Papers
23Collaborators
Circulating Tumor DNABiomarkers, TumorNeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsPapillomavirus InfectionsColorectal NeoplasmsAnus NeoplasmsCarcinoma, Squamous Cell

Positions

2022–

INSERM scientist, Group leader - Team Circulating EpiMarkers

Irest - INSERM U1085

2022–

Tenured Research Scientist

Institut Curie · Genetics and Developmental Biology

2015–

Research Scientist

Institut Curie · Translational Research Department

2011–

Postdoctoral researcher

New York University · Department of Pathology

Country

FR