AI Article Synopsis

  • A study aimed to differentiate chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (chRCC) from benign renal oncocytoma using molecular biomarkers to prevent unnecessary treatments.
  • Researchers analyzed DNA methylation patterns in tumor and normal tissue samples, identifying a set of 79 specific CpG sites that could effectively distinguish between oncocytoma and chRCC.
  • The findings suggest that a diagnostic model based on these CpGs could serve as a clinical biomarker for accurate diagnosis, which may help in applying it to preoperative biopsy specimens in the future.

Article Abstract

Purpose: A challenge in the diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is to distinguish chromophobe RCC (chRCC) from benign renal oncocytoma, because these tumor types are histologically and morphologically similar, yet they require different clinical management. Molecular biomarkers could provide a way of distinguishing oncocytoma from chRCC, which could prevent unnecessary treatment of oncocytoma. Such biomarkers could also be applied to preoperative biopsy specimens such as needle core biopsy specimens, to avoid unnecessary surgery of oncocytoma.

Methods: We profiled DNA methylation in fresh-frozen oncocytoma and chRCC tumors and adjacent normal tissue and used machine learning to identify a signature of differentially methylated cytosine-phosphate-guanine sites (CpGs) that robustly distinguish oncocytoma from chRCC.

Results: Unsupervised clustering of Stanford and preexisting RCC data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) revealed that of all RCC subtypes, oncocytoma is most similar to chRCC. Unexpectedly, however, oncocytoma features more extensive, overall abnormal methylation than does chRCC. We identified 79 CpGs with large methylation differences between oncocytoma and chRCC. A diagnostic model trained on 30 CpGs could distinguish oncocytoma from chRCC in 10-fold cross-validation (area under the receiver operating curve [AUC], 0.96 (95% CI, 0.88 to 1.00)) and could distinguish TCGA chRCCs from an independent set of oncocytomas from a previous study (AUC, 0.87). This signature also separated oncocytoma from other RCC subtypes and normal tissue, revealing it as a standalone diagnostic biomarker for oncocytoma.

Conclusion: This CpG signature could be developed as a clinical biomarker to support differential diagnosis of oncocytoma and chRCC in surgical samples. With improved biopsy techniques, this signature could be applied to preoperative biopsy specimens.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7529536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/PO.20.00015DOI Listing

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