domingo, 18 de septiembre de 2016

A 19-Gene expression signature as a predictor of survival in colorectal cancer. - PubMed - NCBI

A 19-Gene expression signature as a predictor of survival in colorectal cancer. - PubMed - NCBI



 2016 Sep 8;9(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s12920-016-0218-1.

A 19-Gene expression signature as a predictor of survival in colorectal cancer.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Histopathological assessment has a low potential to predict clinical outcome in patients with the same stage of colorectal cancer. More specific and sensitive biomarkers to determine patients' survival are needed. We aimed to determine gene expression signatures as reliable prognostic marker that could predict survival of colorectal cancer patients with Dukes' B and C.

METHODS:

We examined microarray gene expression profiles of 78 archived tissues of patients with Dukes' B and C using the Illumina DASL assay. The gene expression data were analyzed using the GeneSpring software and R programming.

RESULTS:

The outliers were detected and replaced with randomly chosen genes from the 90 % confidence interval of the robust mean for each group. We performed three statistical methods (SAM, LIMMA and t-test) to identify significant genes. There were 19 significant common genes identified from microarray data that have been permutated 100 times namely NOTCH2, ITPRIP, FRMD6, GFRA4, OSBPL9, CPXCR1, SORCS2, PDC, C12orf66, SLC38A9, OR10H5, TRIP13, MRPL52, DUSP21, BRCA1, ELTD1, SPG7, LASS6 and DUOX2. This 19-gene signature was able to significantly predict the survival of patients with colorectal cancer compared to the conventional Dukes' classification in both training and test sets (p < 0.05). The performance of this signature was further validated as a significant independent predictor of survival using patient cohorts from Australia (n = 185), USA (n = 114), Denmark (n = 37) and Norway (n = 95) (p < 0.05). Validation using quantitative PCR confirmed similar expression pattern for the six selected genes.

CONCLUSION:

Profiling of these 19 genes may provide a more accurate method to predict survival of patients with colorectal cancer and assist in identifying patients who require more intensive treatment.

KEYWORDS:

Colorectal cancer; Microarray analysis; Real-time PCR; Survivalm

PMID:
 
27609023
 
PMCID:
 
PMC5016995
 
DOI:
 
10.1186/s12920-016-0218-1

[PubMed - in process] 
Free PMC Article

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