lunes, 22 de abril de 2013

Development and validation of a 32-gene prognostic index for prostate cancer progression

Development and validation of a 32-gene prognostic index for prostate cancer progression


Development and validation of a 32-gene prognostic index for prostate cancer progression














  1. W. Scott McDougalb,1





  1. Edited* by Patricia K. Donahoe, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, and approved March 1, 2013 (received for review September 25, 2012)






Abstract



The accurate determination of the risk of cancer recurrence is an important unmet need in the management of prostate cancer. Patients and physicians must weigh the benefits of currently available therapies against the potential morbidity of these treatments. Herein we describe the development of a gene expression-based continuous risk index and a validation of this test in an independent, blinded cohort of post-radical prostatectomy (RP) patients. A gene expression signature, prognostic for prostate-specific antigen (PSA) recurrence, was identified through a bioinformatic analysis of the expression of 1,536 genes in malignant prostate tissue from a training cohort of consecutive patients treated with RP. The assay was transferred to a real-time RT-PCR platform, and a continuous risk index model was constructed based on the expression of 32 genes. This 32-gene risk index model was validated in an independent, blinded cohort of 270 RP patients. In multivariate analyses, the risk index was prognostic for risk of PSA recurrence and had added value over standard prognostic markers such as Gleason score, pathologic tumor stage, surgical margin status, and presurgery PSA (hazard ratio, 4.05; 95% confidence interval, 1.50–10.94; P = 0.0057). Furthermore, RP patients could be stratified based on the risk of PSA recurrence and the development of metastatic disease. The 32-gene signature identified here is a robust prognostic marker for disease recurrence. This assay may aid in postoperative treatment selection and has the potential to impact decision making at the biopsy stage.




Footnotes





  • Author contributions: C.-L.W., B.E.S., X.-J.M., C.J.C., R.S., Y.Z., M.W.K., C.A.S., M.G.E., and W.S.M. designed research; C.-L.W., B.E.S., X.-J.M., C.J.C., S.W., R.S., Y.Z., M.W.K., C.A.S., M.G.E., and W.S.M. performed research; C.-L.W., B.E.S., X.-J.M., C.J.C., S.W., R.S., Y.Z., M.W.K., C.A.S., M.G.E., and W.S.M. analyzed data; and C.-L.W., B.E.S., X.-J.M., C.J.C., S.W., R.S., Y.Z., M.W.K., C.A.S., M.G.E., and W.S.M. wrote the paper.



  • Conflict of interest statement: C.-L.W. received research support from bioTheranostics, Inc. for this study. W.S.M., C.-L.W., and M.W.K. have served on an advisory board for bioTheranostics, Inc. C.J.C. has served as a consultant for bioMerieux and bioTheranostics. B.E.S, R.S., Y.Z., C.A.S., and M.G.E. are employees and stockholders of bioTheranostics, Inc.



  • Data from the discovery phase of this study were presented, in part, at the 2007 American Society of Clinical Oncology Prostate Cancer Symposium.



  • *This Direct Submission article had a prearranged editor.



  • Data deposition: The microarray data reported in this paper have been deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database, www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo (accession no. GSE44353).



  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1215870110/-/DCSupplemental.




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