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Gene expression--based survival prediction in lung adenocarcinoma: a multi-site, blinded validation study

Authors :
Shedden, Kerby
Taylor, Jeremy M.G.
Enkemann, Steven A.
Tsao, Ming-Sound
Yeatman, Timothy J.
Gerald, William L.
Eschrich, Steven
Jurisica, Igor
Giordano, Thomas J.
Misek, David E.
Chang, Andrew C.
Zhu, Chang Qi
Strumpf, Daniel
Hanash, Samir
Shepherd, Frances A.
Ding, Keyue
Seymour, Lesley
Naoki, Katsuhiko
Pennell, Nathan
Weir, Barbara
Verhaak, Roel
Ladd-Acosta, Christine
Golub, Todd
Gruidl, Michael
Sharma, Anupama
Szoke, Janos
Zakowski, Maureen
Rusch, Valerie
Kris, Mark
Viale, Agnes
Motoi, Noriko
Travis, William
Conley, Barbara
Seshan, Venkatraman E.
Meyerson, Matthew
Kuick, Rork
Dobbin, Kevin K.
Lively, Tracy
Jacobson, James W.
Beer, David G.
Source :
Nature Medicine. August, 2008, Vol. 14 Issue 8, p822, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Although prognostic gene expression signatures for survival in early-stage lung cancer have been proposed, for clinical application, it is critical to establish their performance across different subject populations and in different laboratories. Here we report a large, training-testing, multi-site, blinded validation study to characterize the performance of several prognostic models based on gene expression for 442 lung adenocarcinomas. The hypotheses proposed examined whether microarray measurements of gene expression either alone or combined with basic clinical covariates (stage, age, sex) could be used to predict overall survival in lung cancer subjects. Several models examined produced risk scores that substantially correlated with actual subject outcome. Most methods performed better with clinical data, supporting the combined use of clinical and molecular information when building prognostic models for early-stage lung cancer. This study also provides the largest available set of microarray data with extensive pathological and clinical annotation for lung adenocarcinomas.<br />In the United States and in many Western countries, lung cancer represents the leading cause of cancer-related death (1). The 5-year, overall survival rate is 15% and has not improved [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956
Volume :
14
Issue :
8
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.198547819