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Methylation patterns in dysplasia in inflammatory bowel disease patients. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • IBD with colonic involvement is linked to a higher risk of colorectal cancer, but distinguishing between cancer related to IBD and sporadic instances is challenging.
  • Data suggests that abnormal DNA methylation may play a key role in the development of cancer in IBD patients.
  • A study involving patients with various types of dysplasia and cancer assessed methylation patterns in the colonic mucosa, finding significant links between certain gene methylations and IBD along with dysplastic lesions, highlighting the potential for future classifications based on these patterns.

Article Abstract

Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) with colonic involvement increases colorectal cancer risk. However, the distinction between IBD related and sporadic dysplasia in IBD patients is difficult. Some data favors the importance of abnormal DNA methylation in IBD-related carcinogenesis. We aimed to define methylation patterns in patients with colonic cancer or dysplasia diagnosis following an IBD diagnosis. Multicentric cross-sectional study-91 samples from colonic mucosa with/without dysplasia from 9 patients with IBD-related dysplasia/cancer and 26 patients with IBD and sporadic dysplasia/cancer were included. Methylation patterns of CpG islands in the promoter regions of 67 genes were studied by Methylation-specific Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification. Mean age at IBD diagnosis: 42 ± 16 years;at dysplasia diagnosis: 56 ± 14 years. Twenty-ninepatients had ulcerative colitis. Twenty-five patients had at least 1 lesion endoscopically described as adenoma-like, 4 at least 1 non-adenoma like, 3 had cancer and 3 had dysplasia in flat mucosa. No patient had both adenoma-like and non-adenoma-like lesions. Patients with an IBD-related lesion were significantly younger at IBD diagnosis ( = .003) and at dysplasia/cancer diagnosis ( = .039). Promoter methylation of genes was significantly associated to dysplasia/cancer; methylation of was significantly associated to IBD-related dysplasia/cancer. Promoter methylation of genes was significantly associated to active IBD. Methylation analysis, namely of , may contribute to the classification of dysplastic lesions in IBD- to be further tested in prospective studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00365521.2020.1766552DOI Listing

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