2023
DOI: 10.1111/iju.15335
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Epigenetic alterations in urothelial bladder cancer associated with disease outcomes

Francisca Martins Nunes,
Joana Dias Apolónio,
Anabela Mota‐Pinto
et al.

Abstract: ObjectivesBladder cancer (BLCA) is a molecular heterogeneous disease with known genetic distinctive signatures. However, DNA methylation is highly prevalent across a wide range of tumors, suggesting its potential in oncogenesis. Here, we aimed to interrogate the role of nine epigenetic alterations as diagnostic and prognostic markers in BLCA.MethodsDNA methylation, gene expression, and clinicopathological information were retrieved from The Cancer Genome Atlas data portal. Methylation values and gene expressio… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…2 The current study by Nunes et al assessed the methylation status of selected coding and non-coding DNA regions using the TCGA dataset of bladder cancer tissues. 3 Specifically, the authors evaluated the methylation status of nine CpGs, previously identified potential prognostic markers in breast cancer, and investigated the role of these alterations as diagnostic and prognostic markers in bladder cancer. They found that highly methylated cg12374721 (long non-coding RNA C17orf93/ HOXB13-AS1) was a prognostic marker for worse progression-free survival and overall survival.…”
Section: Editorial Comment Editorial Comment On Epigenetic Alteration...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 The current study by Nunes et al assessed the methylation status of selected coding and non-coding DNA regions using the TCGA dataset of bladder cancer tissues. 3 Specifically, the authors evaluated the methylation status of nine CpGs, previously identified potential prognostic markers in breast cancer, and investigated the role of these alterations as diagnostic and prognostic markers in bladder cancer. They found that highly methylated cg12374721 (long non-coding RNA C17orf93/ HOXB13-AS1) was a prognostic marker for worse progression-free survival and overall survival.…”
Section: Editorial Comment Editorial Comment On Epigenetic Alteration...mentioning
confidence: 99%