domingo, 11 de noviembre de 2018

A comparative study of survival models for breast cancer prognostication revisited: the benefits of multi-gene models. - PubMed - NCBI

A comparative study of survival models for breast cancer prognostication revisited: the benefits of multi-gene models. - PubMed - NCBI



 2018 Nov 3;19(1):400. doi: 10.1186/s12859-018-2430-9.

A comparative study of survival models for breast cancer prognostication revisited: the benefits of multi-gene models.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

The development of clinical -omic biomarkers for predicting patient prognosis has mostly focused on multi-gene models. However, several studies have described significant weaknesses of multi-gene biomarkers. Indeed, some high-profile reports have even indicated that multi-gene biomarkers fail to consistently outperform simple single-gene ones. Given the continual improvements in -omics technologies and the availability of larger, better-powered datasets, we revisited this "single-gene hypothesis" using new techniques and datasets.

RESULTS:

By deeply sampling the population of available gene sets, we compare the intrinsic properties of single-gene biomarkers to multi-gene biomarkers in twelve different partitions of a large breast cancer meta-dataset. We show that simple multi-gene models consistently outperformed single-gene biomarkers in all twelve partitions. We found 270 multi-gene biomarkers (one per ~11,111 sampled) that always made better predictions than the best single-gene model.

CONCLUSIONS:

The single-gene hypothesis for breast cancer does not appear to retain its validity in the face of improved statistical models, lower-noise genomic technology and better-powered patient cohorts. These results highlight that it is critical to revisit older hypotheses in the light of newer techniques and datasets.

KEYWORDS:

Multi-gene models; Single-gene models; Survival models

PMID:
 
30390622
 
PMCID:
 
PMC6215649
 
DOI:
 
10.1186/s12859-018-2430-9

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