Ultrasensitive Detection of Cancer Using cfDNA Methylation Sequencing
Jasmine Zhou, Professor of Genomics and Bioinformatics, University of California-Los Angeles
The detection of tumor-derived cell-free DNA in plasma is one of the
most promising directions in cancer diagnosis. The major challenge in
such an approach is how to identify the tiny amount of tumor DNAs out of
total cell-free DNAs in blood. Here we propose an ultrasensitive cancer
detection method, termed ‘CancerDetector’, using the DNA methylation
profiles of cell-free DNAs. The key of our method is to
probabilistically model the joint methylation states of multiple
adjacent CpG sites on an individual sequencing read, in order to exploit
the pervasive nature of DNA methylation for signal amplification.
Therefore, CancerDetector can sensitively identify a trace amount of
tumor cfDNAs in plasma, at the level of individual reads. Testing
CancerDetector on real plasma data demonstrated its high sensitivity and
specificity in detecting tumor cfDNAs. In addition, the predicted tumor
fraction showed great consistency with tumor size and survival outcome.
Note that all of those testing were performed on sequencing data at low
to medium coverage (1× to 10×). Therefore, CancerDetector holds the
great potential to detect cancer early and cost-effectively.
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