TY - JOUR
T1 - Diagnosis of prostate cancer using differentially expressed genes in stroma
AU - Jia, Zhenyu
AU - Wang, Yipeng
AU - Sawyers, Anne
AU - Yao, Huazhen
AU - Rahmatpanah, Farahnaz
AU - Xia, O. Qin
AU - Xu, Qiang
AU - Pio, Rebecca
AU - Turan, Tolga
AU - Koziol, James A.
AU - Goodison, Steve
AU - Carpenter, Philip
AU - Wang-Rodriguez, Jessica
AU - Simoneau, Anne
AU - Meyskens, Frank
AU - Sutton, Manuel
AU - Lernhardt, Waldemar
AU - Beach, Thomas
AU - Monforte, Joseph
AU - McClelland, Michael
AU - Mercola, Dan
PY - 2011/4/1
Y1 - 2011/4/1
N2 - More than one million prostate biopsies are performed in the United States every year. A failure to find cancer is not definitive in a significant percentage of patients due to the presence of equivocal structures or continuing clinical suspicion. We have identified gene expression changes in stroma that can detect tumor nearby. We compared gene expression profiles of 13 biopsies containing stroma near tumor and 15 biopsies from volunteers without prostate cancer. About 3,800 significant expression changes were found and thereafter filtered using independent expression profiles to eliminate possible age-related genes and genes expressed at detectable levels in tumor cells. A stroma-specific classifier for nearby tumor was constructed on the basis of 114 candidate genes and tested on 364 independent samples including 243 tumor-bearing samples and 121 nontumor samples (normal biopsies, normal autopsies, remote stroma, as well as stroma within a few millimeters of tumor). The classifier predicted the tumor status of patients using tumor-free samples with an average accuracy of 97% (sensitivity = 98% and specificity = 88%) whereas classifiers trained with sets of 100 randomly generated genes had no diagnostic value. These results indicate that the prostate cancer microenvironment exhibits reproducible changes useful for categorizing the presence of tumor in patients when a prostate sample is derived from near the tumor but does not contain any recognizable tumor.
AB - More than one million prostate biopsies are performed in the United States every year. A failure to find cancer is not definitive in a significant percentage of patients due to the presence of equivocal structures or continuing clinical suspicion. We have identified gene expression changes in stroma that can detect tumor nearby. We compared gene expression profiles of 13 biopsies containing stroma near tumor and 15 biopsies from volunteers without prostate cancer. About 3,800 significant expression changes were found and thereafter filtered using independent expression profiles to eliminate possible age-related genes and genes expressed at detectable levels in tumor cells. A stroma-specific classifier for nearby tumor was constructed on the basis of 114 candidate genes and tested on 364 independent samples including 243 tumor-bearing samples and 121 nontumor samples (normal biopsies, normal autopsies, remote stroma, as well as stroma within a few millimeters of tumor). The classifier predicted the tumor status of patients using tumor-free samples with an average accuracy of 97% (sensitivity = 98% and specificity = 88%) whereas classifiers trained with sets of 100 randomly generated genes had no diagnostic value. These results indicate that the prostate cancer microenvironment exhibits reproducible changes useful for categorizing the presence of tumor in patients when a prostate sample is derived from near the tumor but does not contain any recognizable tumor.
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U2 - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-2585
DO - 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-2585
M3 - Article
C2 - 21459804
AN - SCOPUS:79953309070
SN - 0008-5472
VL - 71
SP - 2476
EP - 2487
JO - Cancer Research
JF - Cancer Research
IS - 7
ER -