Scientific Abstracts | 2021

Abstract 71: Accelerated Epigenetic Age among HIV-infected Nigerian Women with Invasive Cervical Cancer

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Purpose: Invasive cervical cancer (ICC) is one of the HIV-associated cancers with a high burden in Nigeria. ICC occurs at relatively younger age in HIV infected women, with HIV known to promote aging and related diseases, including cancer. DNA methylation changes with increasing age, various health-related exposures, and age-related health outcomes, suggesting a role of DNA methylation in biological aging and disease. We sought to understand the effect of HIV infection on epigenetic age acceleration (EpiAgeAccel) in Nigerian women with ICC. Methods: Epigenetic age (EpiAge) was estimated by Horvath9s calculator using genome-wide methylation data in 116 cervical tissue samples from three groups of women: a) HIV positive with ICC (n=39); b) HIV positive and cancer-free (n=53); and c) HIV negative with ICC (n=24). EpiAgeAccel was computed as the regression residuals of EpiAge against chronological age (ChronAge), representing the independent deviation of EpiAge from ChronAge. We compared EpiAgeAccel across the 3 HIV/ICC groups using multiple linear regressions adjusting for ChronAge, education, parity, employment, cancer stage, body mass index, and study site. Among the ICC women, we compared EpiAgeAccel between 26 tumor tissues and their surrounding normal tissues using paired t-tests, stratified by HIV status. Results: EpiAgeAccel among HIV positive women with ICC was 4.5 years higher than HIV positive and cancer-free women (p=0.019). We did not find substantial differences in EpiAgeAccel between HIV-positive women with ICC and HIV-negative women with ICC. EpiAgeAccel was 7.9 and 2.9 years higher in tumor tissues compared to the surrounding normal tissues among HIV positive women (p=0.021) and negative women (p=0.295), respectively. Conclusion: EpiAge is accelerated in cervical tissue of HIV-infected women with ICC. EpiAgeAccel may be a potential biomarker for ICC screening and early detection for women living with HIV in low- and middle-income countries. Citation Format: Jonah Musa, Kyeezu Kim, Yinan Zheng, Yishu Qu, Brian Joyce, Jun Wang, Lois Travis, Demirkan Gursel, Olugbenga Silas, Fatimah Abdulkareem, Godwin Imade, Alani Akanmu, Jian-Jun Wei, Masha Kocherginsky, Kwnag-Youn Kim, Firas Wehbe, Chad Achenbach, Rose Anorlu, Melissa Simon, Atiene Sagay, Folasade Ogunsola, Robert Murphy, Lifang Hou. Accelerated Epigenetic Age among HIV-infected Nigerian Women with Invasive Cervical Cancer [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 9th Annual Symposium on Global Cancer Research; Global Cancer Research and Control: Looking Back and Charting a Path Forward; 2021 Mar 10-11. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2021;30(7 Suppl):Abstract nr 71.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1158/1538-7755.ASGCR21-71
Language English
Journal Scientific Abstracts

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