A prognostic gene expression signature in infratentorial ependymoma Journal Article


Authors: Wani, K.; Armstrong, T. S.; Vera-Bolanos, E.; Raghunathan, A.; Ellison, D.; Gilbertson, R.; Vaillant, B.; Goldman, S.; Packer, R. J.; Fouladi, M.; Pollack, I.; Mikkelsen, T.; Prados, M.; Omuro, A.; Soffietti, R.; Ledoux, A.; Wilson, C.; Long, L.; Gilbert, M. R.; Aldape, K.
Article Title: A prognostic gene expression signature in infratentorial ependymoma
Abstract: Patients with ependymoma exhibit a wide range of clinical outcomes that are currently unexplained by clinical or histological factors. Little is known regarding molecular biomarkers that could predict clinical behavior. Since recent data suggest that these tumors display biological characteristics according to their location (cerebral vs. infratentorial vs. spinal cord), rather than explore a broad spectrum of ependymoma, we focused on molecular alterations in ependymomas arising in the infratentorial compartment. Unsupervised clustering of available gene expression microarray data revealed two major subgroups of infratentorial ependymoma. Group 1 tumors over expressed genes that were associated with mesenchyme, Group 2 tumors showed no distinct gene ontologies. To assess the prognostic significance of these gene expression subgroups, real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction assays were performed on genes defining the subgroups in a training set. This resulted in a 10-gene prognostic signature. Multivariate analysis showed that the 10-gene signature was an independent predictor of recurrence-free survival after adjusting for clinical factors. Evaluation of an external dataset describing subgroups of infratentorial ependymomas showed concordance of subgroup definition, including validation of the mesenchymal subclass. Importantly, the 10-gene signature was validated as a predictor of recurrence-free survival in this dataset. Taken together, the results indicate a link between clinical outcome and biologically identified subsets of infratentorial ependymoma and offer the potential for prognostic testing to estimate clinical aggressiveness in these tumors. © Springer-Verlag 2012.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; cancer survival; child; controlled study; human tissue; survival analysis; young adult; major clinical study; overall survival; dna-binding proteins; antineoplastic agent; reproducibility of results; gene overexpression; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; cluster analysis; gene expression; gene expression profiling; gene function; age factors; gene expression regulation, neoplastic; longitudinal studies; antigens, neoplasm; microarray analysis; oligonucleotide array sequence analysis; quantitative analysis; biomarker; tumor recurrence; nucleotide sequence; ependymoma; expression profiling; microarray; sex factors; dna topoisomerases, type ii; rna extraction; databases, genetic; infratentorial neoplasms; recurrence free survival; cerebellum tumor; infratentorial ependymoma; prognostic genes; gene expression signature
Journal Title: Acta Neuropathologica
Volume: 123
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0001-6322
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2012-05-01
Start Page: 727
End Page: 738
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-012-0941-4
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22322993
PMCID: PMC4013829
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 July 2012" - "CODEN: ANPTA" - "Source: Scopus"
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Antonio Marcilio Padula Omuro
    204 Omuro