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1 Departments of Surgical Oncology and
2 Pathology, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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3% of all solid neoplasms with an incidence (estimated at 31,900 cases in the United States in 2003) roughly equal to that of all forms of leukemia combined (1)
. Between 25 and 40% of patients with RCC present with locally advanced or metastatic disease. Early clinical manifestations of RCC are diverse and may give rise to a spectrum of nonspecific and often misattributed symptoms. Indeed, a majority of RCCs are now discovered in patients not suspected of harboring a genitourinary malignancy. Unlike with other solid malignancies in which established serum or urinary biomarkers are available for early detection, diagnosis of RCC is confounded by the lack of cancer-specific diagnostic techniques. Because RCC is curable if detected when still confined to the renal capsule, the development of novel diagnostic noninvasive approaches for the early detection of kidney cancer is imperative (2
, 3)
. Silencing of tumor suppressor genes such as p16, VHL, BRCA1, and the mismatch repair gene human homologue of MutL gene 1 have established promoter hypermethylation as a common mechanism for tumor suppressor inactivation in human cancer and as a promising new target for molecular detection (4 , 5) . Several cancer genes, including p16 and von Hippel-Lindau gene (VHL), have been found to have hypermethylation of normally unmethylated CpG islands within the promoter regions in kidney cancer cells (6, 7, 8) . Hypermethylation can be analyzed by the sensitive methylation-specific PCR (MSP) technique, which can identify 1 methylated allele in 1000 unmethylated alleles (9) , appropriate for the detection of few neoplastic cells in a background of normal cells.
Bodily fluids that surround or drain the organ of interest from patients with various solid malignancies have been successfully used for MSP-based detection. These include detection of lung cancer in serum (10) , sputum (11) and bronchial lavage (12) , head and neck cancer (13) in serum, breast cancer in ductal lavage (14) , and prostate cancer in urine (15) . However, kidney cancer has not yet been tested. As most renal tumors arise from the tubular epithelium with potential access to urine, we hypothesized that urine from patients with kidney tumors could contain aberrant promoter hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes in cancer cells or free DNA from apoptotic or necrotic cancer cells amenable to MSP analysis. We therefore screened paired kidney tumor and urine DNAs and normal and benign disease controls for hypermethylation of a panel of tumor suppressor genes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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200500 µl surrounding the sediment pellet. DNA was extracted from tissue and fluid using a standard technique of digestion with proteinase K in the presence of SDS at 37°C overnight followed by phenol/chloroform extraction (18)
. Tissue specimen DNA was simply spooled out after precipitation with 100% ethanol. Urine DNA was precipitated with one-tenth volume of 10 M ammonium acetate, 2 µl of glycogen (Roche Diagnostics Corporation, Indianapolis, IN), and 2.5 volumes of 100% ethanol, followed by incubation at -20°C and centrifugation at top speed (16,000 relative centrifugal force).
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Statistical Analysis.
The sensitivity of MSP-based detection of hypermethylation in urine was calculated as number of positive tests/number of cancer cases. The specificity was calculated as number of negative tests/number of cases without cancer and in a second distinct approach as number of negative tests/number of cases without hypermethylation of a particular gene. The association of tumor stage with positive detection of hypermethylation in urine and the association of frequency of hypermethylation of a particular gene in different histological cell types were compared using Fishers exact test. Results were considered statistically significant if the two-sided P was
0.05.
| RESULTS |
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4 cm; Table 1
We compared the hypermethylation status of the six genes in the panel in the urine DNAs to the corresponding tumor DNAs. We detected an identical pattern of gene hypermethylation in 44 of 50 (88%) matched urine DNAs (Fig. 1
and Table 1
). The urine-positive cases (designated M/M in Table 1
) included 17 of 19 cases of T1a (
4 cm) and 32 of 35 organ-confined (stages I and II) kidney tumors, as well as 2 of 3 oncocytomas. No hypermethylation was detected in urine DNA from 6 patients (nos. 53, 37, 50, 19, 31, and 24 designated M/U in Table 1
). MSP of tumor and urine DNAs from patients 19 and 24 are shown in the p16 and APC gel panels, respectively, in Fig. 1
. There was no statistical association (P = 0.51, Fishers exact test) between pathological stage of the 50 tumors and positive detection in urine (29 of 33 stage I, including the 3 oncocytomas, 5 of 5 stage II, 8 of 9 stage III, and 2 of 3 stage IV).
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| DISCUSSION |
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The majority of kidney cancers (8085%) are RCCs originating from the renal parenchyma. The remaining 1520% are mainly transitional cell carcinomas (TCCs) of the renal pelvis. The classification of RCC comprises several histological subtypes with different genetic backgrounds and natural histories. Clear cell carcinoma (70%) and papillary carcinoma (1015%) account for the majority. The remaining types include chromophobe carcinoma (5%), the benign tumor oncocytoma (510%), rarer forms such as collecting duct carcinoma (<1%) and RCC unclassified (
5%; Ref. 24
). TCC of the renal pelvis involves similar genetic alterations to TCC of the bladder (25)
. The heterogeneity of genetic alterations found in distinct histological types of kidney cancer (26)
and indeed within the same histological type dictated the use of a panel of genes. Indeed, no single gene is known to be hypermethylated in more than a proportion of renal tumors. For example, RASSF1A has been reported to be hypermethylated in up to 56% (27)
but p14 in only 13% (6)
of primary kidney tumors. The genes included in the panel were selected on the basis of having been previously reported (7
, 9 , 19
, 20
, 27
, 28)
and confirmed by ourselves to be hypermethylated in kidney cancer but not normal cells. It will likely be necessary to use a panel of genes to maximize detection of any type of adult sporadic cancer, analogous to the need for analysis of several genes for the diagnosis of familial breast cancer or hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. Analysis of a panel of six genes does not present a technical barrier particularly when current advances in array and high throughput technology are considered.
Using a panel of six tumor suppressor genes, we have demonstrated that promoter hypermethylation is common in kidney cancer and can be readily detected in a specific manner in urine DNA, including urines from 17 of 19 patients with kidney tumors of the lowest pathological stage (T1a). However, it should be noted that although T1a lesions are indeed the smallest tumor and have the best prognosis under the current staging system, a minority of small RCCs can still be biologically advanced. In our study, we examined two cases of TCC (nos. 29 and 44) where urinary cytology is standard clinical practice. In both cases, traditional cytology was negative for cancer, whereas MSP was positive for hypermethylation. In this initial feasibility study, we observed a sensitivity of 88%. Hypermethylation was not detected in six (12%) urine DNAs. In these urine samples, neoplastic DNA may have been present in an amount lower than can currently be detected by conventional MSP. As is routine in PCR methodology, we chose to limit PCR to a maximum number of cycles (n = 36) because it is known that specificity can decrease in MSP (29) , as in other PCR protocols, with increased cycle number. It is possible that a higher number of cycles or a two-stage (nested) MSP approach (30) would have resulted in the positive detection of hypermethylation in the six negative urine DNAs. We observed no significant difference in detection frequency between different pathological stages which suggested that tumor stage was not the main determinant of positive detection in urine. We believe the sensitivity of this assay can likely be improved by the study of optimal urine collection techniques, enrichment of neoplastic cells or DNA from the urine by antibody or oligo-based magnetic bead technology, as well as improvements in PCR technology.
For a feasibility study of detection, it is important that the target genetic alteration is cancer specific and not present in normal or benign cells. Although we only included in the hypermethylation panel genes reported to be unmethylated in normal cells (7
, 9
, 19
, 20
, 27
, 28)
, we still performed several controls to determine specificity. First, we tested and did not observe gene hypermethylation in urine DNA from 12 normal, healthy controls and 12 patients with nonneoplastic kidney disease (Fig. 2)
. Furthermore, no hypermethylation was observed in urine DNAs from 5 patients with BPH or prostatitis and 9 patients with inflammatory disease of the bladder, e.g., cystitis (data not shown). Second, we examined the urine DNA for the methylation status of a gene known to be unmethylated in the tumor DNA. This approach has been validated in previous MSP-based detection studies (10
, 13
, 15)
. A particular gene that is unmethylated in tumor DNA should always be unmethylated in the corresponding bodily fluid DNA. For example, tumor 38 in Fig. 1
did not have VHL hypermethylation, and the matched urine 38 DNA was also negative. Additional representative examples can be seen in the gel panels shown in Fig. 1
. There was no case where a urine DNA gave a positive methylation result in the absence of methylation in the corresponding tumor (potential false positive; Table 1
). Third, we examined 10 paired normal kidney tissue DNAs from the renal cancer patients and observed no hypermethylation at our routine PCR amplification sensitivity (Fig. 2)
. The possibility that histologically normal tissue taken from a neoplastic kidney may contain occult neoplastic cells with gene promoter hypermethylation should be noted. Similarly, the possible field effect of transitional cell carcinoma suggested that a normal urothelium specimen from a patient with TCC of the kidney might contain neoplastic cells with hypermethylated alleles. We therefore obtained 5 ureter tissue specimens containing transitional cells from patients with a single discrete renal cell cancer. No gene hypermethylation was found in the transitional cells. These findings indicate that urine hypermethylation is highly specific for cancer. Future studies could use sufficient controls to address larger issues beyond this exploratory study.
In our study, hypermethylation of the VHL gene was specific for clear cell renal cancer as expected (22) . We also noted that hypermethylation of RASSF1A was significantly more frequent in papillary RCC compared with other kidney tumors. Although hypermethylation of p14 or APC was more common in nonclear cell cancers, the difference in frequency was not statistically significant in the current sample size. Analysis of larger numbers of specimens will determine whether this tendency is significant. Thus, MSP-based detection also has the potential for differential diagnosis of renal cancer based on the pattern of gene methylation found. Promoter hypermethylation, as with other mechanisms of inactivation of suppressor genes, deletion, and point mutation, can be found in different types of cancer (6) . However, tissue-specific patterns of hypermethylation have been previously reported (6 , 30) , and it has been estimated that several hundred as yet unidentified genes are hypermethylated in human cancer (31) . Moreover, the tissue specificity of genes predisposing to the familial forms of different histological forms of renal cancer and the fact that genetic alterations have aided in the classification of kidney cancer (26) suggest that it is likely genes hypermethylated exclusively or more frequently in renal cancer will be identified in the near future. Inclusion of such genes in a renal cancer detection panel would provide greater specificity for kidney cancer and minimize the potential confounding variables of bladder or prostate cancer. Algorithms could be developed to score the specificity of a particular gene hypermethylation panel for the detection of renal cancer compared with other cancer types.
In addition to early detection and differential diagnosis of renal cancer, if the timing of hypermethylation of certain genes was found to be associated with a defined pathological stage, the panel could be extended in the future to simultaneously provide molecular staging and prognostic information. For example, inactivation of VHL is an early event (26) , whereas inactivation of p16 is believed to be a late event (32) in renal tumorigenesis, although additional work is required for more precise timing of hypermethylation of p16 and other genes. The overall number of genes and which genes are hypermethylated could form a basis for molecular staging. Furthermore, molecular staging might eventually extend to the prediction of the behavior of individual tumors within a particular pathological stage. The heterogeneity of genetic alterations between tumors, e.g., which tumor suppressor gene pathways are abrogated, is likely one underlying cause of differences in individual tumor behavior and response. The panel used here contained genes of clear biological significance such as the p16, p14, and APC genes involved in the p16/Rb and p53/p14 tumor suppressor gene pathways and the Wnt signaling pathway (33) . As new genes are found to be hypermethylated in kidney cancer, future studies of the gene hypermethylation profile in large, representative series of renal cancers will determine both the number of genes and which genes to be screened to obtain optimal diagnostic coverage and information.
Molecular detection by microsatellite loss of heterozygosity analysis has been reported in 19 of 25 (76%) urine and 15 of 25 (60%) serum specimen DNAs from renal cancer patients (34) and, in another study, in 65% of plasma DNAs from clear cell renal cancer patients (35) . Other potential targets for detection in urine might include point mutation of VHL or mitochondrial DNA (36) . However, MSP-based detection has several advantages over microsatellite or point mutation-based detection of renal cancer in urine. These include (a) the greater sensitivity of MSP, which will be important for detection of early, small, or precursor lesions; (b) the fact that unlike point mutation, no prior knowledge of the gene status is needed; and (c) the fact that a normal blood sample is not needed to verify heterozygosity or that a base alteration is a somatic mutation and not a polymorphism.
The hypermethylation panel of six genes tested here provided 100% diagnostic coverage of 50 kidney cancers, including all major histological cell types and pathological stages, and is certainly manageable in terms of time and economy in view of recent chip, array, and high-throughput technology. We believe that an optimal hypermethylation panel could provide simultaneous early detection, differential diagnosis, and molecular prognosis and prediction of behavior of kidney cancer. In this study, we have demonstrated for the first time the feasibility of hypermethylation-based sensitive (88%) and 100% specific (no false positives) noninvasive detection of renal cancer in urine from patients with early-stage as well as advanced carcinoma. If these results are confirmed in larger studies, promoter hypermethylation may have useful clinical application in kidney cancer diagnosis and management.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Grant support: The Early Detection Research Network through the National Cancer Institute Grant U01. P. C. is a recipient of a Flight Attendants Medical Research Institute Young Clinical Scientist Award.
Requests for reprints: Paul Cairns, Fox Chase Cancer Center, 7701 Burholme Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19111. E-mail P_Cairns{at}fccc.edu
Received 6/ 5/03. Revised 8/20/03. Accepted 9/23/03.
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