Fragmentation signatures in cancer patients resemble those of patients with vascular or autoimmune diseases
Found that the DNA fragmentation patterns once thought to be a smoking gun for cancer also show up in patients with lupus, scleroderma, and blood clots — likely from inflammation — and shows how to redesign cancer blood tests to avoid false alarms.
Abstract
Multiple case-controlled studies have shown that analyzing fragmentation patterns in plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA) can distinguish individuals with cancer from healthy controls. However, there have been few studies that investigate various types of cfDNA fragmentomics patterns in individuals with other diseases. We therefore developed a comprehensive statistic, called fragmentation signatures, that integrates the distributions of fragment positioning, fragment length, and fragment end-motifs in cfDNA. We found that individuals with venous thromboembolism, systemic lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, or scleroderma have cfDNA fragmentation signatures that closely resemble those found in individuals with advanced cancers. Furthermore, these signatures were highly correlated with increases in inflammatory markers in the blood. We demonstrate that these similarities in fragmentation signatures lead to high rates of false positives in individuals with autoimmune or vascular disease when evaluated using conventional binary classification approaches for multicancer earlier detection (MCED). To address this issue, we introduced a multiclass approach for MCED that integrates fragmentation signatures with protein biomarkers and achieves improved specificity in individuals with autoimmune or vascular disease while maintaining high sensitivity. Though these data put substantial limitations on the specificity of fragmentomics-based tests for cancer diagnostics, they also offer ways to improve the interpretability of such tests. Moreover, we expect these results will lead to a better understanding of the process—most likely inflammatory—from which abnormal fragmentation signatures are derived.
@article{curtis2025fragmentation,
title = {Fragmentation Signatures in Cancer Patients Resemble Those of Patients with Vascular or Autoimmune Diseases},
author = {Curtis, Samuel D. and Liu, Tingshan and Bai, Yuxin and Wang, Yuxuan and Panda, Sambit and Li, Adam and Xu, Haoyin and O'Reilly, Eliza and Dobbyn, Lisa and Popoli, Maria and Ptak, Janine and Silliman, Natalie and Thoburn, Chris and Tie, Jeanne and Gibbs, Peter and {Ho-Pham}, Lan T. and Tran, Bich N. H. and Tran, Thach S. and Nguyen, Tuan V. and Konig, Maximilian F. and Petri, Michelle and Rosen, Antony and Mecoli, Christopher A. and Shah, Ami A. and Mulder, Frits and {van Es}, Nick and {PLATO-VTE Study Group} and Bettegowda, Chetan and Kinzler, Kenneth W. and Papadopoulos, Nickolas and Vogelstein, Joshua T. and Vogelstein, Bert and Douville, Christopher},
year = 2025,
month = aug,
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
volume = {122},
number = {34},
pages = {e2426890122},
publisher = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.2426890122},
}