Breast cancer diagnostics based on extracellular DNA and RNA circulating in blood

2008 
Extracellular DNA and RNA were extracted from blood plasma and cell surface-bound fractions of healthy women and patients with fibroadenoma and breast cancer. Frequency of methylation of RASSF1A, Cyclin D2, and RARβ2 genes was detected in the extracellular DNA using methylation-specific PCR. Methylation of at least one of these genes was found in plasma of 13% patients with nonmalignant breast fibroadenoma and in 60% of breast cancer patients. Employment cell-surface bound DNA as the substrate for PCR increased the detection frequency of gene methylation up to 87% in patients with fibroadenoma and 95% in breast cancer patients. In clinically healthy women the methylation markers have not been found in extracellular DNA. GAPDH, RASSF8, Ki-67 mRNAs, and 18S rRNA copies were quantified using RT-qPCR of extracellular RNA circulating in blood of patients with breast tumors and healthy controls. The major part of blood extracellular RNA is associated with cell surface. ROC analysis has shown that differences in concentrations 18S RNA, RASSF8, and Ki-67 mRNAs in blood plasma are highly sensitive and specific in discrimination of benign and malignant breast tumors. Thus, analysis of methylated forms of tumor suppressor genes in blood extracellular and quantification of specific extracellular RNA circulating in blood plasma may detect mammary gland tumors and discriminate malignant and benign neoplasms.
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