4.7 Article

Consensus on Molecular Subtypes of High-Grade Serous Ovarian Carcinoma

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CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
卷 24, 期 20, 页码 5037-5047

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AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-0784

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  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Terry Fox Research Institutes
  3. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research - Government of Ontario
  4. Cancer Research Society (Canada)
  5. The National Cancer Institute [5P30CA006516-53]
  6. Gattuso-Slaight Personalized Cancer Medicine Fund at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre
  7. Terry Fox Research Institute
  8. NCI at the NIH [1R03CA191447-01A1, U24CA180996]
  9. Terry Fox Research Institute (Translational Research Program Grant) [1060]

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Purpose: The majority of ovarian carcinomas are of high-grade serous histology, which is associated with poor prognosis. Surgery and chemotherapy are the mainstay of treatment, and molecular characterization is necessary to lead the way to targeted therapeutic options. To this end, various computational methods for gene expressionbased subtyping of high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) have been proposed, but their overlap and robustness remain unknown. Experimental Design: We assess three major subtype classifiers by meta-analysis of publicly available expression data, and assess statistical criteria of subtype robustness and classifier concordance. We develop a consensus classifier that represents the subtype classifications of tumors based on the consensus of multiple methods, and outputs a confidence score. Using our compendium of expression data, we examine the possibility that a subset of tumors is unclassifiable based on currently proposed subtypes. Results: HGSOC subtyping classifiers exhibit moderate pairwise concordance across our data compendium (58.9%-70.9%; P < 10(-5)) and are associated with overall survival in a meta-analysis across datasets (P < 10(-5)). Current subtypes do not meet statistical criteria for robustness to reclustering across multiple datasets (prediction strength < 0.6). A new subtype classifier is trained on concordantly classified samples to yield a consensus classification of patient tumors that correlates with patient age, survival, tumor purity, and lymphocyte infiltration. Conclusions: A new consensus ovarian subtype classifier represents the consensus of methods and demonstrates the importance of classification approaches for cancer that do not require all tumors to be assigned to a distinct subtype. (C) 2018 AACR.

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