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Journal article

Consistent metagenes from cancer expression profiles yield agent specific predictors of chemotherapy response

From

Department of Systems Biology, Technical University of Denmark1

Center for Biological Sequence Analysis, Department of Systems Biology, Technical University of Denmark2

Jules Bordet Institute3

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute4

University of Texas at Dallas5

Brigham and Women’s Hospital6

BACKGROUND: Genome scale expression profiling of human tumor samples is likely to yield improved cancer treatment decisions. However, identification of clinically predictive or prognostic classifiers can be challenging when a large number of genes are measured in a small number of tumors. RESULTS: We describe an unsupervised method to extract robust, consistent metagenes from multiple analogous data sets.

We applied this method to expression profiles from five "double negative breast cancer" (DNBC) (not expressing ESR1 or HER2) cohorts and derived four metagenes. We assessed these metagenes in four similar but independent cohorts and found strong associations between three of the metagenes and agent-specific response to neoadjuvant therapy.

Furthermore, we applied the method to ovarian and early stage lung cancer, two tumor types that lack reliable predictors of outcome, and found that the metagenes yield predictors of survival for both. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that the use of multiple data sets to derive potential biomarkers can filter out data set-specific noise and can increase the efficiency in identifying clinically accurate biomarkers.

Language: English
Publisher: BioMed Central
Year: 2011
Pages: 310
ISSN: 14712105
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-12-310
ORCIDs: Eklund, Aron Charles

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