Novel RB1-loss transcriptomic signature is associated with poor clinical outcomes across cancer types Journal Article


Authors: Chen, W. S.; Alshalalfa, M.; Zhao, S. G.; Liu, Y.; Mahal, B. A.; Quigley, D. A.; Wei, T.; Davicioni, E.; Rebbeck, T. R.; Kantoff, P. W.; Maher, C. A.; Knudsen, K. E.; Small, E. J.; Nguyen, P. L.; Feng, F. Y.
Article Title: Novel RB1-loss transcriptomic signature is associated with poor clinical outcomes across cancer types
Abstract: Purpose: Rb-pathway disruption is of great clinical interest, as it has been shown to predict outcomes in multiple cancers. We sought to develop a transcriptomic signature for detecting biallelic RB1 loss (RBS) that could be used to assess the clinical implications of RB1 loss on a pan-cancer scale. Experimental Design: We utilized data from the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (N 1⁄4 995) to develop the first pan-cancer transcriptomic signature for predicting biallelic RB1 loss (RBS). Model accuracy was validated using The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Pan-Cancer dataset (N 1⁄4 11,007). RBS was then used to assess the clinical relevance of biallelic RB1 loss in TCGA Pan-Cancer and in an additional metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) cohort. Results: RBS outperformed the leading existing signature for detecting RB1 biallelic loss across all cancer types in TCGA Pan-Cancer (AUC, 0.89 vs. 0.66). High RBS (RB1 biallelic loss) was associated with promoter hypermethylation (P 1⁄4 0.008) and gene body hypomethylation (P 1⁄4 0.002), suggesting RBS could detect epigenetic gene silencing. TCGA Pan-Cancer clinical analyses revealed that high RBS was associated with short progression-free (P < 0.00001), overall (P 1⁄4 0.0004), and disease-specific (P < 0.00001) survival. On multivariable analyses, high RBS was predictive of shorter progression-free survival in TCGA Pan-Cancer (P 1⁄4 0.03) and of shorter overall survival in mCRPC (P 1⁄4 0.004) independently of the number of DNA alterations in RB1. Conclusions: Our study provides the first validated tool to assess RB1 biallelic loss across cancer types based on gene expression. RBS can be useful for analyzing datasets with or without DNA-sequencing results to investigate the emerging prognostic and treatment implications of Rb-pathway disruption. © 2019 American Association for Cancer Research.
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 25
Issue: 14
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2019-07-15
Start Page: 4290
End Page: 4299
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-19-0404
PUBMED: 31010837
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC7883384
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Philip Wayne Kantoff
    197 Kantoff