| Literature DB >> 27120795 |
Helle Kristensen1,2, Anni R Thomsen2, Christa Haldrup1, Lars Dyrskjøt1, Søren Høyer3, Michael Borre4, Peter Mouritzen2, Torben F Ørntoft1, Karina Dalsgaard Sørensen1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study investigates the diagnostic and prognostic biomarker potential of miRNAs in prostate cancer (PC).Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; diagnosis; microRNA; prognosis; prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27120795 PMCID: PMC5058715 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Clinicopathological characteristics for patient cohorts
| Samples | Cohort 1 (Training) | Cohort 2 (Validation) | Cohort 3 (External validation) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RP ( | MPC ( | NM ( | RP ( | MPC ( | NM ( | RP ( | MPC ( | NM ( | |
| 63 (48–72) | 63 (63–77) | 70 (56–83) | 62 (46–72) | 73 (49–91) | 62 (56–80) | 58 (37–83) | 59 (53–79) | 56 (46–67) | |
| ≤ 10 ng/mL | 35 (27.6) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 43 (38.4) | 2 (7.7) | NA | 76 (76.8) | 6 (42.9) | NA |
| > 10 ng/mL | 92 (72.4) | 7 (100) | NA | 69 (61.6) | 24 (92.3) | NA | 22 (22.2) | 8 (57.1) | NA |
| Unknown | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 1 (1.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | |
| Mean PSA, ng/mL (range) | 16 (2–49) | 74 (16–100) | NA | 16 (2–65) | 157 (1–500) | NA | 9 (1–46) | 61 (0–506) | NA |
| pT2a-c | 78 (61.4) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 66 (58.9) | 1 (3.8) | NA | 69 (69.7) | 2 (14.3) | NA |
| pT3a-b | 49 (38.6) | 5 (71.4) | NA | 46 (41.1) | 5 (19.2) | NA | 25 (25.2) | 5 (35.7) | NA |
| pT4 | 0 (0.0) | 1 (14.3) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 20 (76.9) | NA | 5 (5.1) | 2 (14.3) | NA |
| Unknown | 0 (0.0) | 1 (14.3) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 5 (35.7) | NA |
| < 7 | 60 (47.2) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 43 (38.4) | 1 (3.8) | NA | 32 (32.3) | 0 (0.0) | NA |
| 7 | 53 (41.7) | 2 (28.6) | NA | 57 (50.9) | 5 (19.2) | NA | 55 (55.6) | 1 (7.1) | NA |
| 8–10 | 14 (11.0) | 5 (71.4) | NA | 12 (10.7) | 20 (76.9) | NA | 12 (12.1) | 7 (50.0) | NA |
| Unknown | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | (0.0) | 6 (42.9) | NA |
| pN0 | 127 (100) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 102 (91.1) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 76 (76.8) | 3 (21.4) | NA |
| pN1 | 0 (0.0) | 2 (28.6) | NA | 3 (2.6) | 2 (7.7) | NA | 5 (5.1) | 8 (57.1) | NA |
| Unknown | 0 (0.0) | 5 (71.4) | NA | 7 (6.3) | 24 (92.3) | NA | 18 (18.2) | 3 (21.4) | NA |
| M0 | 127 (100) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 112 (100) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 99 (100) | 0 (0.0) | NA |
| M1 | 0 (0.0) | 7 (100) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 26 (100) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 14 (100) | NA |
| Unknown | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | NA |
| Negative | 88 (69.3) | NA | NA | 80 (71.4) | NA | NA | 78 (78.8) | NA | NA |
| Positive | 38 (29.9) | NA | NA | 31 (27.7) | NA | NA | 21 (21.2) | NA | NA |
| Unknown | 1 (0.8) | NA | NA | 1 (0.9) | NA | NA | 0 (0.0) | NA | NA |
| No biochemical recurrence | 70 (55.1) | NA | NA | 62 (55.4) | NA | NA | 74 (74.8) | NA | NA |
| Biochemical recurrence | 57 (44.9) | NA | NA | 50 (44.6) | NA | NA | 25 (25.3) | NA | NA |
| 36 (2–90) | NA | NA | 40 (3–123) | NA | NA | 72 (1–179) | NA | NA | |
Abbreviations: MPC, metastatic prostate cancer (primary tumor tissue from patient with metastatic PC); NA, not applicable/available; NM, non-malignant prostate; PSA, prostate specific antigen; RP, radical prostatectomy.
For recurrence-free survival analyses, one RP patient from cohort 1 and 2 RP patients from cohort 2 were excluded due to postoperative endocrine treatment. Hence, the final RP cohort 1 and 2 included 126 and 110 RP patients, respectively.
Successfully validated miRNAs from the comparison of non-malignant and prostate cancer samples
| Cohort 1 (13 NM | Cohort 2 (19 NM | Cohort 3 (28 NM | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upregulated in PC | FC | BH corrected | AUC (95% CI) | FC | BH corrected | AUC (95% CI) | FC | BH corrected | AUC (95% CI) |
| miR-375 | 3.31 | 0.96 (0.92–0.99) | 2.46 | 0.83 (0.75–0.91) | 2.01 | 0.83 (0.76–0.90) | |||
| miR-663b | 111.98 | 0.94 (0.90–0.99) | 4.37 | 0.66 (0.53–0.79) | 2.67 | 0.86 (0.79–0.93) | |||
| miR-615-3p | 26.52 | 0.90 (0.85–0.96) | 15.47 | 0.83 (0.74–0.93) | −1.48 | 0.60 (0.48–0.71) | |||
| miR-425-5p | 2.78 | 0.89 (0.83–0.96) | 2.59 | 0.85 (0.75–0.95) | 1.51 | 0.83 (0.76–0.90) | |||
| miR-663a | 3.52 | 0.82 (0.70–0.95) | 3.99 | 0.72 (0.59–0.84) | 2.67 | 0.86 (0.79–0.93) | |||
| miR-182-5p | 2.22 | 0.73 (0.62–0.85) | 3.43 | 0.79 (0.70–0.89) | 2.07 | 0.89 (0.83–0.95) | |||
| miR-183-5p | 2.16 | 0.72 (0.62–0.81) | 2.72 | 0.70 (0.58–0.82) | 3.40 | 0.90 (0.84–0.97) | |||
| miR-205-5p | −22.39 | 0.97 (0.95–1.00) | −23.12 | 0.94 (0.87–1.00) | −7.38 | 0.86 (0.79–0.92) | |||
| miR-221-3p | −3.04 | 0.95 (0.90–1.00) | −3.26 | 0.88 (0.80–0.96) | −2.92 | 0.93 (0.89–0.97) | |||
| miR-222-3p | −2.95 | 0.92 (0.83–1.00) | −2.83 | 0.88 (0.81–0.95) | −3.25 | 0.92 (0.87–0.96) | |||
| miR-376c-3p | −3.90 | 0.92 (0.85–0.99) | −2.62 | 0.74 (0.63–0.86) | −1.47 | 0.74 (0.65–0.84) | |||
| miR-136-5p | −6.10 | 0.86 (0.76–0.97) | −2.40 | 0.68 (0.56–0.80) | −1.31 | 0.68 (0.58–0.79) | |||
| miR-455-3p | −2.95 | 0.86 (0.77–0.95) | −3.48 | 0.80 (0.71–0.90) | −1.56 | 0.70 (0.60–0.80) | |||
| miR-455-5p | −4.55 | 0.81 (0.69–0.93) | −3.33 | 0.71 (0.59–0.82) | −1.80 | 0.80 (0.72–0.88) | |||
| miR-154-5p | −3.28 | 0.75 (0.59–0.91) | −3.33 | 0.70 (0.60–0.80) | −1.32 | 0.76 (0.68–0.85) | |||
Results for the top candidates with fold change > ± 2 in both the training cohort 1 and validation cohort 2 are shown. These 15 top candidate diagnostic miRNAs were also tested in the external validation cohort 3.
Figure 1Diagnostic potential of top miRNA candidates
Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis of the six miRNAs with the highest diagnostic potential (AUC > 0.83) in both cohort 1 (A) and cohort 2 (B). The miRNAs are ordered as appearing in Table 2. (C) The diagnostic potential of the top candidates were further tested in the external data set (cohort 3). Cohort 1 consists of 13 non-malignant and 134 prostate cancer FFPE samples. Cohort 2 consists of 19 non-malignant and 141 prostate cancer FFPE samples. Cohort 3 consists of 28 non-malignant and 113 prostate cancer fresh frozen samples. AUC; area under the ROC curve.
Prognostic potential of the 3-miRNA prognostic classifier (miR-185-5p+miR-221-3p+miR-326) assessed by uni- and multivariate Cox regression analyses of biochemical recurrence-free survival time in three RP cohorts
| Variable | Characteristics | Univariate | Multivariate | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95% CI) | C-index | HR (95% CI) | C-index | |||||
| Age at diagnosis | Continuous | 1.00 (0.94–1.05) | 0.858 | 0.53 | – | – | ||
| Tumor stage | pT2a-c vs. pT3a-c | 3.12 (1.81–5.36) | 0.64 | – | – | |||
| Gleason score | < 7 vs.≥ 7 | 2.73 (1.51–4.93) | 0.61 | 2.68 (1.46–4.93) | 0.72 | 0.74 | ||
| Surgical margin status | Negative vs. positive | 2.73 (1.59–4.70) | 0.63 | 2.46 (1.39–4.34) | ||||
| Preoperative PSA | Continuous | 1.05 (1.02–1.08) | 0.62 | 1.04 (1.01–1.07) | ||||
| 3-miRNA classifier | Continuous | 1.71 (1.31–2.24) | 0.66 | 1.36 (1.03–1.79) | ||||
| Age at diagnosis | Continuous | 0.97 (0.93–1.03) | 0.319 | 0.53 | – | – | ||
| Surgical margin status | Negative vs. positive | 3.37 (1.89–6.00) | 0.64 | – | – | |||
| Gleason score | < 7 vs.≥ 7 | 2.42 (1.23–4.73) | 0.59 | – | – | |||
| Tumor stage | pT2a-c vs. pT3a-c | 3.00 (1.69–5.30) | 0.63 | 3.21 (1.76–5.84) | 0.73 | 0.75 | ||
| Preoperative PSA | Continuous | 1.05 (1.03–1.07) | 0.72 | 1.05 (1.02–1.07) | ||||
| 3-miRNA classifierd | Continuous | 1.44 (1.11–1.88) | 0.58 | 1.28 (1.00–1.64) | ||||
| Age at diagnosis | Continuous | 1.03 (0.98–1.09) | 0.278 | 0.56 | – | – | ||
| Tumor stage | pT2a-c vs. pT3a-c | 4.05 (1.80–9.12) | 0.68 | – | – | |||
| Surgical margin status | Negative vs. positive | 3.81 (1.70–8.54) | 0.63 | 2.40 (0.94–6.12) | 0.74 | 0.80 | ||
| Preoperative PSA | Continuous | 1.09 (1.06–1.13) | 0.66 | 1.06 (1.02–1.11) | ||||
| 3-miRNA classifier | Continuous | 2.10 (1.42–3.10) | 0.70 | 1.91 (1.26–2.91) | ||||
Abbreviations: CI, confidence Interval; HR, hazard ratio; PSA, prostate specific antigen; pT, pathological tumor stage; RP, radical prostatectomy.
Predictive accuracy estimated by Harrell's concordance index (C-index).
Left column, C-index based on clinicopathological variables only (i.e. excluding miRNA classifier expression); right column, C-index based on all variables included in the model.
The 3-miRNA prognostic classifier was analyzed in multivariate analysis including tumor stage, Gleason score, surgical margin, and preoperative PSA. In the final multivariate model, variables failing the global multivariate analysis were excluded by stepwise backward selection.
For generation of this 3-miRNA prognostic classifier, a weighted sum was calculated. The expression level of each miRNA was weighed by the estimated regression coefficients in a multivariate proportional hazards model (trained in RP cohort 1, and tested in RP cohorts 2 and 3).
Gleason score was excluded from analysis in RP cohort 3, because the low Gleason score group (< 7) had no events. Significant P values (P < 0.05) are marked in bold.
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier plots with prostate-specific antigen recurrence as end point
Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of recurrence free survival (RFS) based on the 3-miRNA prognostic classifier (miR-185-5p+miR-221-3p+miR-326) in prostatectomy samples from three independent RP cohorts. Patients in the training RP cohort 1 (left) were divided into low vs. high risk groups after ROC analysis. Patients in validation RP cohort 2 (middle) were divided into low/high risk groups according to the cut-off (fraction) defined in RP cohort 1. This was done in the same way for the external validation RP cohort 3 (right). Significant P values for two-sided log-rank test are given. High molecular risk status, as defined by the 3-miRNA prognostic classifier (miR-185-5p+miR-221-3p+miR-326), was significantly associated with early biochemical recurrence after RP in three independent cohorts.