Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Consensus of gene expression phenotypes and prognostic risk predictors in primary lung adenocarcinoma

Markus Ringnér and Johan Staaf _

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Oncotarget. 2016; 7:52957-52973. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.10641

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Abstract

Markus Ringnér1 and Johan Staaf1

1 Division of Oncology and Pathology, Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Lund University, Medicon Village, SE 22381, Lund, Sweden

Correspondence to:

Johan Staaf, email:

Keywords: lung adenocarcinoma, molecular subtype, gene expression, prognostic, risk predictor

Received: April 04, 2016 Accepted: June 13, 2016 Published: July 16, 2016

Abstract

Transcriptional profiling of lung adenocarcinomas has identified numerous gene expression phenotype (GEP) and risk prediction (RP) signatures associated with patient outcome. However, classification agreement between signatures, underlying transcriptional programs, and independent signature validation are less studied. We classified 2395 transcriptional adenocarcinoma profiles, assembled from 17 public cohorts, using 11 GEP and seven RP signatures, finding that 16 signatures were associated with patient survival in the total cohort and in multiple individual cohorts. For significant signatures, total cohort hazard ratios were ~2 in univariate analyses (mean=1.95, range=1.4-2.6). Strong classification agreement between signatures was observed, especially for predicted low-risk patients by adenocarcinoma-derived signatures. Expression of proliferation-related genes correlated strongly with GEP subtype classifications and RP scores, driving the gene signature association with prognosis. A three-group consensus definition of samples across 10 GEP classifiers demonstrated aggregation of samples with specific smoking patterns, gender, and EGFR/KRAS mutations, while survival differences were only significant when patients were divided into low- or high-risk. In summary, our study demonstrates a consensus between GEPs and RPs in lung adenocarcinoma through a common underlying transcriptional program. This consensus generalizes reported problems with current signatures in a clinical context, stressing development of new adenocarcinoma-specific single sample predictors for clinical use.


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