| Literature DB >> 26396673 |
Shu-Chun Li1, Rong Ma2, Jian-Zhong Wu2, Xia Xiao3, Wei Wu4, Gang Li2, Bo Chen5, Ashok Sharma6, Shan Bai6, Bo-Ying Dun6, Jin-Xiong She6, Jin-Hai Tang2.
Abstract
Chemotherapy plays a key role in improving disease-free survival and overall survival of gastric cancer (GC); however, response rates are variable and a non-negligible proportion of patients undergo toxic and costly chemotherapeutic regimens without a survival benefit. Several studies have shown the existence of GC subtypes which may predict survival and respond differently to chemotherapy. It is also known that the expression level of chemotherapy-related and target therapy-related genes correlates with response to specific antitumor drugs. Nevertheless, these genes have not been considered jointly to define GC subtypes. In this study, we evaluated seven genes known to influence chemotherapeutic response (ERCC1, BRCA1, RRM1, TUBB3, STMN1, TYMS and TOP2A) and five receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) (EGFR, ERBB2, PDGFRB, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2). We demonstrate significant heterogeneity of gene expression among GC patients and identified four GC subtypes using the expression profiles of eight genes in two co-regulation groups: chemosensitivity (BRCA1, STMN1, TYMS and TOP2A) and RTKs (EGFR, PDGFRB, VEGFR1 and VEGFR2). The results are of immediate translational value regarding GC diagnostics and therapeutics, as many of these genes are curently widely used in relevant clinical testing.Entities:
Keywords: Gastric cancer; chemotherapy; co-regulation; gene expression
Year: 2015 PMID: 26396673 PMCID: PMC4568798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transl Res Impact factor: 4.060