sábado, 15 de octubre de 2011

Abstract | A gene signature in histologically normal surgical margins is predictive of oral carcinoma recurrence

A gene signature in histologically normal surgical margins is predictive of oral carcinoma recurrence

Patricia P Reis email, Levi Waldron email, Bayardo Perez-Ordonez email, Melania Pintilie email, Natalie Naranjo Galloni email, Yali Xuan email, Nilva K Cervigne email, Giles C Warner email, Antti A Makitie email, Colleen Simpson email, David Goldstein email, Dale Brown email, Ralph Gilbert email, Patrick Gullane email, Jonathan Irish email, Igor Jurisica email and Suzanne Kamel-Reid email
BMC Cancer 2011, 11:437doi:10.1186/1471-2407-11-437

Published:11 October 2011

Abstract (provisional)


Background

Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC) is a major cause of cancer death worldwide, which is mainly due to recurrence leading to treatment failure and patient death. Histological status of surgical margins is a currently available assessment for recurrence risk in OSCC; however histological status does not predict recurrence, even in patients with histologically negative margins. Therefore, molecular analysis of histologically normal resection margins and the corresponding OSCC may aid in identifying a gene signature predictive of recurrence.

Methods

We used a meta-analysis of 199 samples (OSCCs and normal oral tissues) from five public microarray datasets, in addition to our microarray analysis of 96 OSCCs and histologically normal margins from 24 patients, to train a gene signature for recurrence. Validation was performed by quantitative real-time PCR using 136 samples from an independent cohort of 30 patients.

Results

We identified 138 significantly over-expressed genes (>2-fold, false discovery rate of 0.01) in OSCC. By penalized likelihood Cox regression, we identified a 4-gene signature with prognostic value for recurrence in our training set. This signature comprised the invasion-related genes MMP1, COL4A1, P4HA2, and THBS2. Over-expression of this 4-gene signature in histologically normal margins was associated with recurrence in our training cohort (p=0.0003, logrank test) and in our independent validation cohort (p=0.04, HR=6.8, logrank test).

Conclusion

Gene expression alterations occur in histologically normal margins in OSCC. Over-expression of the 4-gene signature in histologically normal surgical margins was validated and highly predictive of recurrence in an independent patient cohort. Our findings may be applied to develop a molecular test, which would be clinically useful to help predict which patients are at a higher risk of local recurrence.


Abstract A gene signature in histologically normal surgical margins is predictive of oral carcinoma recurrence

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