DNA Methylation Markers from Negative Surgical Margins Can Predict Recurrence of Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma
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Cancers
Abstract
The identification of molecular markers in negative surgical margins of oral squamous
cell carcinoma (OSCC) might help in identifying residual molecular aberrations, and potentially
improve the prediction of prognosis. We performed an Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip array
on 32 negative surgical margins stratified based on the status of tumor recurrence in order to identify
recurrence-specific aberrant DNA methylation (DNAme) markers. We identified 2512 recurrenceassociated Differentially Methylated Positions (DMPs) and 392 Differentially Methylated Regions
(DMRs) which were enriched in cell signaling and cancer-related pathways. A set of 14-CpG markers
was able to discriminate recurrent and non-recurrent cases with high specificity and sensitivity
rates (AUC 0.98, p = 3 × 10−6; CI: 0.95–1). A risk score based on the 14-CpG marker panel was
applied, with cases classified within higher risk scores exhibiting poorer survival. The results
were replicated using tumor-adjacent normal HNSCC samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas
(TCGA). We identified residual DNAme aberrations in the negative surgical margins of OSCC
patients, which could be informative for patient management by improving therapeutic intervention.
This study proposes a novel DNAme-based 14-CpG marker panel as a promising predictor for tumor
recurrence, which might contribute to improved decision-making for the personalized treatment of
OSCC cases