| Literature DB >> 24522433 |
Shanthi Sivendran1, Rui Chang2, Lisa Pham3, Robert G Phelps4, Sara T Harcharik5, Lawrence D Hall6, Sebastian G Bernardo5, Marina M Moskalenko7, Meera Sivendran6, Yichun Fu7, Ellen H de Moll7, Michael Pan7, Jee Young Moon3, Sonali Arora3, Ariella Cohain3, Analisa DiFeo8, Tammie C Ferringer9, Mikhail Tismenetsky10, Cindy L Tsui5, Philip A Friedlander7, Michael K Parides11, Jacques Banchereau12, Damien Chaussabel13, Mark G Lebwohl5, Jedd D Wolchok14, Nina Bhardwaj15, Steven J Burakoff7, William K Oh7, Karolina Palucka16, Miriam Merad17, Eric E Schadt3, Yvonne M Saenger18.
Abstract
Patients with resected stage II-III cutaneous melanomas remain at high risk for metastasis and death. Biomarker development has been limited by the challenge of isolating high-quality RNA for transcriptome-wide profiling from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) primary tumor specimens. Using NanoString technology, RNA from 40 stage II-III FFPE primary melanomas was analyzed and a 53-immune-gene panel predictive of non-progression (area under the curve (AUC)=0.920) was defined. The signature predicted disease-specific survival (DSS P<0.001) and recurrence-free survival (RFS P<0.001). CD2, the most differentially expressed gene in the training set, also predicted non-progression (P<0.001). Using publicly available microarray data from 46 primary human melanomas (GSE15605), a coexpression module enriched for the 53-gene panel was then identified using unbiased methods. A Bayesian network of signaling pathways based on this data identified driver genes. Finally, the proposed 53-gene panel was confirmed in an independent test population of 48 patients (AUC=0.787). The gene signature was an independent predictor of non-progression (P<0.001), RFS (P<0.001), and DSS (P=0.024) in the test population. The identified driver genes are potential therapeutic targets, and the 53-gene panel should be tested for clinical application using a larger data set annotated on the basis of prospectively gathered data.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24522433 PMCID: PMC4291112 DOI: 10.1038/jid.2014.85
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551