PURPOSE: To identify a set of genes related to thermoradiosensitivity of cervical carcinoma and to establish a predictive method. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 19 patients with cervical cancer (1 with Stage IIIA, 11 with Stage IIIB, 5 with Stage IVA, and 2 with Stage IVB) who underwent definitive thermoradiotherapy between May 1995 and August 2001 were included in this study. We compared the expression profiles of 8 thermoradiosensitive and 11 thermoradioresistant tumors obtained by punch biopsy before treatment using a cDNA microarray consisting of 23,040 human genes. RESULTS: We selected 35 genes on the basis of a clustering analysis and confirmed the validity of these genes with a cross-validation test. Some of these genes were already known to be associated with apoptosis (BIK, TEGT, SSI-3), hypoxia-inducible genes (HIF1A, CA12), and tumor cell invasion and metastasis (CTSL, CTSB, PLAU, CD44). We developed a "predictive score" system that could clearly separate the thermoradiosensitive group from the thermoradioresistant group. CONCLUSION: These results from the treatment program between May 1995 and August 2001 showed that by using gene-expression profiles we can predict the outcome of thermoradiotherapy for advanced cervical carcinoma. A "predictive score" system was developed that could clearly separate the thermoradiosensitive group from the thermoradioresistant group. These results may eventually lead to the achievement of "personalized therapy" for this disease.
PURPOSE: To identify a set of genes related to thermoradiosensitivity of cervical carcinoma and to establish a predictive method. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 19 patients with cervical cancer (1 with Stage IIIA, 11 with Stage IIIB, 5 with Stage IVA, and 2 with Stage IVB) who underwent definitive thermoradiotherapy between May 1995 and August 2001 were included in this study. We compared the expression profiles of 8 thermoradiosensitive and 11 thermoradioresistant tumors obtained by punch biopsy before treatment using a cDNA microarray consisting of 23,040 human genes. RESULTS: We selected 35 genes on the basis of a clustering analysis and confirmed the validity of these genes with a cross-validation test. Some of these genes were already known to be associated with apoptosis (BIK, TEGT, SSI-3), hypoxia-inducible genes (HIF1A, CA12), and tumor cell invasion and metastasis (CTSL, CTSB, PLAU, CD44). We developed a "predictive score" system that could clearly separate the thermoradiosensitive group from the thermoradioresistant group. CONCLUSION: These results from the treatment program between May 1995 and August 2001 showed that by using gene-expression profiles we can predict the outcome of thermoradiotherapy for advanced cervical carcinoma. A "predictive score" system was developed that could clearly separate the thermoradiosensitive group from the thermoradioresistant group. These results may eventually lead to the achievement of "personalized therapy" for this disease.
Authors: Jen-Tsan Chi; Donald E Thrall; Chen Jiang; Stacey Snyder; Diane Fels; Chelsea Landon; Linda McCall; Lan Lan; Marlene Hauck; James R MacFall; Benjamin L Viglianti; Mark W Dewhirst Journal: Clin Cancer Res Date: 2011-02-03 Impact factor: 12.531
Authors: Julie K Schwarz; Jacqueline E Payton; Ramachandran Rashmi; Tao Xiang; Yunhe Jia; Phyllis Huettner; Buck E Rogers; Qin Yang; Mark Watson; Janet S Rader; Perry W Grigsby Journal: Clin Cancer Res Date: 2012-01-10 Impact factor: 12.531