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Expression profiles of PRKG1, SDF2L1 and PPP1R12A are predictive and prognostic factors for therapy response and survival in high‐grade serous ovarian cancer.

Authors :
Benvenuto, Giuseppe
Todeschini, Paola
Paracchini, Lara
Calura, Enrica
Fruscio, Robert
Romani, Chiara
Beltrame, Luca
Martini, Paolo
Ravaggi, Antonella
Ceppi, Lorenzo
Sales, Gabriele
Donati, Federica
Perego, Patrizia
Zanotti, Laura
Ballabio, Sara
Grassi, Tommaso
Delle Marchette, Martina
Tognon, Germana
Sartori, Enrico
Adorni, Marco
Source :
International Journal of Cancer; Jul2020, Vol. 147 Issue 2, p565-574, 10p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

High‐grade serous ovarian cancer (HGS‐EOCs) is generally sensitive to front‐line platinum (Pt)‐based chemotherapy although most patients at an advanced stage relapse with progressive resistant disease. Clinical or molecular data to identify primary resistant cases at diagnosis are not yet available. HGS‐EOC biopsies from 105 Pt‐sensitive (Pt‐s) and 89 Pt‐resistant (Pt‐r) patients were retrospectively selected from two independent tumor tissue collections. Pathway analysis was done integrating miRNA and mRNA expression profiles. Signatures were further validated in silico on a cohort of 838 HGS‐EOC cases from a published dataset. In all, 131 mRNAs and 5 miRNAs belonging to different functionally related molecular pathways distinguish Pt‐s from Pt‐r cases. Then, 17 out of 23 selected elements were validated by orthogonal approaches (SI signature). As resistance to Pt is associated with a short progression‐free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), the prognostic role of the SI signature was assessed, and 14 genes associated with PFS and OS, in multivariate analyses (SII signature). The prognostic value of the SII signature was validated in a third extensive cohort. The expression profiles of SDF2L1, PPP1R12A and PRKG1 genes (SIII signature) served as independent prognostic biomarkers of Pt‐response and survival. The study identified a prognostic molecular signature based on the combined expression profile of three genes which had never been associated with the clinical outcome of HGS‐EOC. This may lead to early identification, at the time of diagnosis, of patients who would not greatly benefit from standard chemotherapy and are thus eligible for novel investigational approaches. What's new? About 20% of women with high‐grade serous epithelial ovarian carcinoma do not respond to platinum‐based chemotherapy but molecular parameters are lacking to predict if a tumor is responsive or not. The authors compared transcriptomic data of more than a thousand tumor biopsies and show that differences in the expression profile of five functionally related pathways distinguish the biology of platinum‐sensitive from resistant cases. Three genes in these networks, SDF2L1, PPP1R12A and PRKG1, were independently associated with survival, and may thus provide a molecular signature for patients' stratification at diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00207136
Volume :
147
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143422719
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.32935