Literature DB >> 16299234

Possible prediction of chemoradiosensitivity of esophageal cancer by serum protein profiling.

Yasuharu Hayashida1, Kazufumi Honda, Yoshiaki Osaka, Tomohiko Hara, Tomoko Umaki, Akihiko Tsuchida, Tatsuya Aoki, Setsuo Hirohashi, Tesshi Yamada.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Establishment of a reliable method of predicting the efficacy of chemotherapy and radiotherapy is necessary to provide the most suitable treatment for each cancer patient. We investigated whether proteomic profiles of serum samples obtained from untreated patients were capable of being used to predict the efficacy of combined preoperative chemoradiotherapy against esophageal cancer. EXPERIMENTAL
DESIGN: Proteomic spectra were obtained from a training set of 27 serum samples (15 pathologically diagnosed responders to preoperative chemoradiotherapy and 12 nonresponders) by surface-enhanced laser desorption and ionization coupled with hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. A proteomic pattern prediction model was constructed from the training set by machine learning algorithms, and it was then tested with an independent validation set consisting of serum samples from 15 esophageal cancer patients in a blinded manner.
RESULTS: We selected a set of four mass peaks, at 7,420, 9,112, 17,123, and 12,867 m/z, from a total of 859 protein peaks, as perfectly distinguishing responders from nonresponders in the training set with a support vector machine algorithm. This set of peaks (i.e., the classifier) correctly diagnosed chemoradiosensitivity in 93.3% (14 of 15) of the cases in the validation set.
CONCLUSIONS: Recent mass spectrometric approaches have revealed that serum contains a large volume of information that reflects the microenvironment of diseased organs. Although a multi-institutional large-scale study will be necessary to confirm each component of the classifier, there is a subtle but definite difference in serum proteomic profile between responders and nonresponders to chemoradiotherapy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16299234     DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-05-0656

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Cancer Res        ISSN: 1078-0432            Impact factor:   12.531


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