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Prognostic value of blood mRNA expression signatures in castration-resistant prostate cancer: a prospective, two-stage study - 30/10/12

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(12)70372-8 
David Olmos, MD a, b, e, , Daniel Brewer, PhD c, , Jeremy Clark, PhD c, , Daniel C Danila, MD f, h, Chris Parker, MD i, Gerhardt Attard, MD a, b, Martin Fleisher, MD g, Alison HM Reid, MD a, b, Elena Castro, MD d, i, Shahneen K Sandhu, MD a, b, Lorraine Barwell, MS j, Nikhil Babu Oommen, MD a, Suzanne Carreira, PhD b, Charles G Drake, MD k, Robert Jones, MD l, Colin S Cooper, ProfPhD c, Howard I Scher, ProfMD f, h, Johann S de Bono, ProfMD a, b,
a Drug Development Unit, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Sutton, UK 
b Section of Medicine, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, UK 
c Section of Molecular Carcinogenesis, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, UK 
d Cancer Genetics Department, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, UK 
e Clinical Research Programme, Spanish National Cancer Research Centre, Madrid, Spain 
f Genitourinary Oncology Service, Department of Medicine, Sidney Kimmel Center for Prostate and Urologic Cancers, New York, NY, USA 
g Department of Laboratory Medicine, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA 
h Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell College of Medicine, New York, NY, USA 
i Academic Urology Unit, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Sutton and London, UK 
j The Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre, Glasgow, UK 
k James Buchanan Brady Urological Institute, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Centre, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA 
l Institute of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK 

* Correspondence to: Prof Johann S de Bono, Section of Medicine, The Institute of Cancer Research, Drug Development Unit, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Downs Road, Sutton, Surrey SM2 5PT, UK

Summary

Background

Biomarkers are urgently needed to dissect the heterogeneity of prostate cancer between patients to improve treatment and accelerate drug development. We analysed blood mRNA expression arrays to identify patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer with poorer outcome.

Methods

Whole blood was collected into PAXgene tubes from patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer and patients with prostate cancer selected for active surveillance. In stage I (derivation set), patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer were used as cases and patients under active surveillance were used as controls. These patients were recruited from The Royal Marsden Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (Sutton, UK) and The Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre (Glasgow, UK). In stage II (validation-set), patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer recruited from the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (New York, USA) were assessed. Whole-blood RNA was hybridised to Affymetrix U133plus2 microarrays. Expression profiles were analysed with Bayesian latent process decomposition (LPD) to identify RNA expression profiles associated with castration-resistant prostate cancer subgroups; these profiles were then confirmed by quantative reverse transcriptase (qRT) PCR studies and correlated with overall survival in both the test-set and validation-set.

Findings

LPD analyses of the mRNA expression data divided the evaluable patients in stage I (n=94) into four groups. All patients in LPD1 (14 of 14) and most in LPD2 (17 of 18) had castration-resistant prostate cancer. Patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer and those under active surveillance comprised LPD3 (15 of 31 castration-resistant prostate cancer) and LDP4 (12 of 21 castration-resistant prostate cancer). Patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer in the LPD1 subgroup had features associated with worse prognosis and poorer overall survival than patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer in other LPD subgroups (LPD1 overall survival 10·7 months [95% CI 4·1–17·2] vs non-LPD1 25·6 months [18·0–33·4]; p<0·0001). A nine-gene signature verified by qRT-PCR classified patients into this LPD1 subgroup with a very low percentage of misclassification (1·2%). The ten patients who were initially unclassifiable by the LPD analyses were subclassified by this signature. We confirmed the prognostic utility of this nine-gene signature in the validation castration-resistant prostate cancer cohort, where LPD1 membership was also associated with worse overall survival (LPD1 9·2 months [95% CI 2·1–16·4] vs non-LPD1 21·6 months [7·5–35·6]; p=0·001), and remained an independent prognostic factor in multivariable analyses for both cohorts.

Interpretation

Our results suggest that whole-blood gene profiling could identify gene-expression signatures that stratify patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer into distinct prognostic groups.

Funding

AstraZeneca, Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre, Prostate Cancer Charity, Prostate Cancer Foundation.

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Vol 13 - N° 11

P. 1114-1124 - novembre 2012 Retour au numéro
Article précédent Article précédent
  • A whole-blood RNA transcript-based prognostic model in men with castration-resistant prostate cancer: a prospective study
  • Robert W Ross, Matthew D Galsky, Howard I Scher, Jay Magidson, Karl Wassmann, Gwo-Shu Mary Lee, Leah Katz, Sumit K Subudhi, Aseem Anand, Martin Fleisher, Philip W Kantoff, William K Oh
| Article suivant Article suivant
  • S-1 plus oxaliplatin versus capecitabine plus oxaliplatin for first-line treatment of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer: a randomised, non-inferiority phase 3 trial
  • Yong Sang Hong, Young Suk Park, Ho Yeong Lim, Jeeyun Lee, Tae Won Kim, Kyu-pyo Kim, Sun Young Kim, Ji Yeon Baek, Jee Hyun Kim, Keun-Wook Lee, Ik-Joo Chung, Sang-Hee Cho, Kyung Hee Lee, Sang Joon Shin, Hye Jin Kang, Dong Bok Shin, Sook Jung Jo, Jae Won Lee

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