A 5-gene DNA methylation signature is a promising prognostic biomarker for early-stage cervical cancer

Hongxia Chen & ChunYan Yang et al. · 2021-06-04

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The demographic information and overall survival (OS) of patients with cervical cancer (CC) (pathological stage: IA-IIA) were extracted from the TCGA database. A univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazard model was performed to identify methylation markers significantly associated with the OS of patients in the training dataset. Then such a prognostic classifier was tested on the validation set and all subgroups. The Kaplan-Meier analysis and ROC analysis were performed to detect the ability to discriminate between patients with different risks and different OS. A DNA methylation signature which contained five genes was found to be significantly associated with the OS of CC patients by the Cox regression analysis in the training dataset. Such a signature could efficiently distinguish the patients into two risk groups with significantly different OS in both datasets. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis showed it had high sensitivity and specificity. Moreover, such a prognostic model also could be effectively applied to different subgroups, including groups of different ages, tumour sizes, histologic types, etc. A 5-DNA methylation signature identified by this study may act as a novel prognostic indicator for early-stage CC, and it may be helpful for the timely diagnosis and intervention of CC at pathological stages IA-IIA.Impact Statement
TL;DR

A risk model based on a 5-DNA methylation signature for early-stage CC patients’ survival prediction is constructed and may shed new light on the early diagnosis and intervention, and potential therapeutic targets for CC patients at pathological stages IA–IIA.

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Authors
Hongxia Chen, Hongying Li, Lei Wang, Yaxiong Li, ChunYan Yang