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Abstract
Background:
Autoantibodies have been detected in sera (blood) before diagnosis of cancer leading to interest in their potential as screening/early
detection biomarkers. As we have found autoantibodies to MUC1 glycopeptides to be elevated in early-stage breast cancer patients, in
this study we analysed these autoantibodies in large population cohorts
of sera taken before cancer diagnosis.
Methods:
Serum
samples from women who subsequently developed breast cancer, and
aged-matched controls, were identified from UK Collaborative Trial of
Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS) and Guernsey serum banks to formed
discovery and validation sets. These were screened on a microarray
platform of 60mer MUC1 glycopeptides and recombinant MUC1 containing 16
tandem repeats. Additional case–control sets comprised of women who
subsequently developed ovarian, pancreatic and lung cancer were also
screened on the arrays.
Results:
In
the discovery (273 cases, 273 controls) and the two validation sets
(UKCTOCS 426 cases, 426 controls; Guernsey 303 cases and 606 controls),
no differences were found in autoantibody reactivity to MUC1 tandem
repeat peptide or glycoforms between cases and controls. Furthermore, no
differences were observed between ovarian, pancreatic and lung cancer
cases and controls.
Conclusion:
This
robust, validated study shows autoantibodies to MUC1 peptide or
glycopeptides cannot be used for breast, ovarian, lung or pancreatic
cancer screening. This has significant implications for research on the
use of MUC1 in cancer detection.
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