Endometrial Cancer Detection Using a Cervical DNA Methylation Assay (MPap) in Women with Abnormal Uterine Bleeding: A Multicenter Hospital-Based Validation Study

Background: We describe a DNA methylation assay, named MPap test, using cervical scraping as an alternative technique for endometrial cancer detection. Methods: A multicenter hospital-based, two-stage validation study was conducted to validate the cancer detection performance of the MPap test. The M...

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Published inCancers Vol. 14; no. 17; p. 4343
Main Authors Wen, Kuo-Chang, Huang, Rui-Lan, Chen, Lin-Yu, Wu, Tzu-I, Lu, Chien-Hsing, Chu, Tang-Yuan, Ou, Yu-Che, Wu, Chen-Hsuan, Hsu, Shih-Tien, Ding, Dah-Ching, Chu, Ling-Hui, Chen, Chien-Wen, Chang, Heng-Cheng, Liu, Yu-Shu, Wang, Hui-Chen, Weng, Yu-Chun, Su, Po-Hsuan, Lin, Hao, Lai, Hung-Cheng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.09.2022
MDPI
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Summary:Background: We describe a DNA methylation assay, named MPap test, using cervical scraping as an alternative technique for endometrial cancer detection. Methods: A multicenter hospital-based, two-stage validation study was conducted to validate the cancer detection performance of the MPap test. The MPap value was determined from the DNA methylation status of two genes (BHLHE22, CDO1) and combined with two other clinical variables (age, BMI). The cutoff threshold of the MPap value was established in stage 1 and validated in stage 2. A total of 592 women with abnormal uterine bleeding were enrolled from five medical centers throughout Taiwan. Results: In stage 1, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the MPap test for detecting endometrial cancer were 92.9%, 71.5%, 39.8%, and 98.0%, respectively. These values were validated in stage 2, being 92.5%, 73.8%, 40.2%, and 98.1%. Moreover, MPap outperformed transvaginal ultrasound in sensitivity and negative predictive values for detecting endometrial cancer. When we applied the algorithm for triage of endometrial cancer detection by MPap in the Taiwan National Health Insurance dataset, we found that it may reduce invasive procedures by 69~73%. Conclusions: MPap may provide a feasible alternative for endometrial cancer detection and can be considered as a triage test to reduce unnecessary invasive procedures.
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2072-6694
2072-6694
DOI:10.3390/cancers14174343