Investigator

Nolwenn M. Dheilly

Head of the Pathogen Discovery laboratory · Institut Pasteur, Virology

NMDNolwenn M. Dheilly
Papers(1)
Molecular detection o…
Collaborators(6)
Philippe PérotYves-Edouard HerpeElise JacquemetGuillaume LeboucherJulia Faillace ThiesenMarc Eloit
Institutions(3)
Unknown InstitutionInstitut PasteurUniversit De Picardie…

Papers

Molecular detection of hrHPV-induced high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions of the cervix through a targeted RNA next generation sequencing assay

Abstract Background Cervical cancer screening programs are increasingly relying on sensitive molecular approaches as primary tests to detect high-risk human papillomaviruses (hrHPV), the causative agents of cervix cancer. Although hrHPV infection is a pre-requisite for the development of most precancerous lesions, the mere detection of viral nucleic acids, also present in transient infections, is not specific of the underlying cellular state, resulting in poor positive predictive values (PPV) regarding lesional states. There is a need to increase the specificity of molecular tests for better stratifying individuals at risk of cancer and to adapt follow-up strategies. Methods HPV-RNA-SEQ, a targeted RNA next generation sequencing assay allowing the detection of up to 16 hrHPV splice events and key human transcripts, has previously shown encouraging PPV for the detection of precancerous lesions. Herein, on 302 patients with normal cytology (NILM, n = 118), low-grade (LSIL, n = 104) or high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL, n = 80), machine learning-based model improvement was applied to reach 2-classes (NILM vs HSIL) or 3-classes (NILM, LSIL, HSIL) predictive models. Results Linear (elastic net) and nonlinear (random forest) approaches resulted in five 2-class models that detect HSIL vs NILM in a validation set with specificity up to 0.87, well within the range of PPV of other competing RNA-based tests in a screening population. Conclusions HPV-RNA-SEQ improves the detection of HSIL lesions and has the potential to complete and eventually replace current molecular approaches as a first-line test. Further performance evaluation remains to be done on larger and prospective cohorts.

54Works
1Papers
6Collaborators
Fish DiseasesEarly Detection of CancerNeoplasm GradingParasitic DiseasesVirus DiseasesSymbiosis

Positions

2023–

Head of the Pathogen Discovery laboratory

Institut Pasteur · Virology

2021–

Cheffe de Projet / Cheffe d'équipe

Anses Laboratoire de Santé Animale de Maisons-Alfort · UMR Virology

2019–

Chargé de projet

Anses Laboratoire de Ploufragan-Plouzané · Unité génétique virale et biosécurité

2015–

Assistant Professor

Stony Brook University · School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences

2013–

Researcher

CNRS Délégation Languedoc-Roussillon · UMR 5290 MIVEGEC

2013–

Postdoctoral researcher

Université de Perpignan · UMR 5244 Ecologie et Evolution des Interactions

2011–

Postdoctoral Researcher

CNRS Délégation Languedoc-Roussillon · UMR 5244 Ecologie et Evolution des Interactions

2010–

Postdoctoral researcher

Ifremer Centre de Brest · UMR 100

2008–

Research assistant

Macquarie University · Biological Sciences

2006–

Research assistant

Macquarie University

Country

FR

Keywords
infectious viruseshost-parasite interactionsevolutionary biologycomparative immunology
Links & IDs
0000-0002-3675-5013

Researcher Id: A-7213-2011