4.6 Article

Characterization of 1577 Primary Prostate Cancers Reveals Novel Biological and Clinicopathologic Insights into Molecular Subtypes

期刊

EUROPEAN UROLOGY
卷 68, 期 4, 页码 555-567

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2015.04.033

关键词

Prostate cancer; ERG; ETS; SPINK1; Microarray; Prognosis

资金

  1. Prostate Cancer Foundation
  2. A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute
  3. GenomeDX

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) molecular subtypes have been defined by essentially mutually exclusive events, including ETS gene fusions (most commonly involving ERG) and SPINK1 overexpression. Clinical assessment may aid in disease stratification, complementing available prognostic tests. Objective: To determine the analytical validity and clinicopatholgic associations of microarray-based molecular subtyping. Design, setting, and participants: We analyzed Affymetrix GeneChip expression profiles for 1577 patients from eight radical prostatectomy cohorts, including 1351 cases assessed using the Decipher prognostic assay (GenomeDx Biosciences, San Diego, CA, USA) performed in a laboratory with Clinical Laboratory Improvements Amendment certification. A microarray-based (m-) random forest ERG classification model was trained and validated. Outlier expression analysis was used to predict other mutually exclusive non-ERG ETS gene rearrangements (ETS+) or SPINK1 overexpression (SPINK1(+)). Outcome measurements: Associations with clinical features and outcomes by multivariate logistic regression analysis and receiver operating curves. Results and limitations: The m-ERG classifier showed 95% accuracy in an independent validation subset (155 samples). Across cohorts, 45% of PCas were classified as m-ERG(+), 9% as m-ETS+, 8% as m-SPINK1(+), and 38% as triple negative (m-ERG(-)/m-ETS-/m-SPINK1(-)). Gene expression profiling supports three underlying molecularly defined groups: m-ERG(+), m-ETS+, and m-SPINK1(+)/triple negative. On multivariate analysis, m-ERG(+) tumors were associated with lower preoperative serum prostate-specific antigen and Gleason scores, but greater extraprostatic extension (p < 0.001). m-ETS+ tumors were associated with seminal vesicle invasion (p = 0.01), while m-SPINK1(+)/triple negative tumors had higher Gleason scores and were more frequent in Black/African American patients (p < 0.001). Clinical outcomes were not significantly different among subtypes. Conclusions: A clinically available prognostic test (Decipher) can also assess PCa molecular subtypes, obviating the need for additional testing. Clinicopathologic differences were found among subtypes based on global expression patterns. Patient summary: Molecular subtyping of prostate cancer can be achieved using extra data generated from a clinical-grade, genome-wide expression-profiling prognostic assay (Decipher). Transcriptomic and clinical analysis support three distinct molecular subtypes: (1) m-ERG(+), (2) m-ETS+, and (3) m-SPINK1(+)/triple negative (m-ERG(-)/m-ETS-/m-SPINK1(-)). Incorporation of subtyping into a clinically available assay may facilitate additional applications beyond routine prognosis. (C) 2015 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.6
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据