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A seven-gene set associated with chronic hypoxia of prognostic importance in hepatocellular carcinoma

Authors :
[UGent]
van Malenstein, Hannah
Gevaert, Olivier
Libbrecht, Louis
Daemen, Anneleen
Allemeersch, Joke
Nevens, Frederik
Van Cutsem, Eric
Cassiman, David
De Moor, Bart
Verslype, Chris
van Pelt, Jos
[UGent]
van Malenstein, Hannah
Gevaert, Olivier
Libbrecht, Louis
Daemen, Anneleen
Allemeersch, Joke
Nevens, Frederik
Van Cutsem, Eric
Cassiman, David
De Moor, Bart
Verslype, Chris
van Pelt, Jos
Source :
Clinical Cancer Research, Vol. 16, no.16, p. 4278-4288 (2010)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

PURPOSE: Hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) have an unpredictable clinical course, and molecular classification could provide better insights into prognosis and patient-directed therapy. We hypothesized that in HCC, certain microenvironmental regions exist with a characteristic gene expression related to chronic hypoxia which would induce aggressive behavior. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We determined the gene expression pattern for human HepG2 liver cells under chronic hypoxia by microarray analysis. Differentially expressed genes were selected and their clinical values were assessed. In our hypothesis-driven analysis, we included available independent microarray studies of patients with HCC in one single analysis. Three microarray studies encompassing 272 patients were used as training sets to determine a minimal prognostic gene set, and one recent study of 91 patients was used for validation. RESULTS: Using computational methods, we identified seven genes (out of 3,592 differentially expressed under chronic hypoxia) that showed correlation with poor prognostic indicators in all three training sets (65/139/73 patients) and this was validated in a fourth data set (91 patients). Retrospectively, the seven-gene set was associated with poor survival (hazard ratio, 1.39; P = 0.007) and early recurrence (hazard ratio, 2.92; P = 0.007) in 135 patients. Moreover, using a hypoxia score based on this seven-gene set, we found that patients with a score of >0.35 (n = 42) had a median survival of 307 days, whereas patients with a score of < or =0.35 (n = 93) had a median survival of 1,602 days (P = 0.005). CONCLUSIONS: We identified a unique, liver-specific, seven-gene signature associated with chronic hypoxia that correlates with poor prognosis in HCCs.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Clinical Cancer Research, Vol. 16, no.16, p. 4278-4288 (2010)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1104524869
Document Type :
Electronic Resource