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James G. Taylor VI, Adam T. Cheuk, Patricia S. Tsang, Joon-Yong Chung, Young K. Song, Krupa Desai, Yanlin Yu, Qing-Rong Chen, Kushal Shah, Victoria Youngblood, Jun Fang, Su Young Kim, Choh Yeung, Lee J. Helman, Arnulfo Mendoza, Vu Ngo, Louis M. Staudt, Jun S. Wei, Chand Khanna, Daniel Catchpoole, Stephen J. Qualman, Stephen M. Hewitt, Glenn Merlino, Stephen J. Chanock, Javed Khan
Published in Volume 119, Issue 11
J Clin Invest. 2009; 119(11):3395–3407 doi:10.1172/JCI39703
Abstract | Full text | PDF | Supplemental material
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Figure 1
High FGFR4 expression in RMS is associated with advanced stage, ARMS histology, and poor survival.

(A) Log2 median-centered expression data showed high FGFR4 expression in RMS tumors compared with other pediatric tumors and normal tissue of human tumors. EWS, Ewings sarcoma; NB, neuroblastoma; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; other, other pediatric tumors; normal, normal tissue. (B) Stage 4 RMS was associated with significantly higher median FGFR4 expression than stage 1 RMS, as analyzed based on the data of Davicioni et al. (Mann-Whitney test) (6). (C) FGFR4 expression was significantly higher in ARMS compared with all other histologic RMS subtypes (Mann-Whitney test). (D) Kaplan-Meier analysis based on a cutoff of median FGFR4 expression showed that patients with higher expression (top 2 quartiles) had significantly higher mortality (than the bottom 2 quartiles; P = 0.03, log-rank test). (E) Murine RMS cell lines (derived from refs. 5, 21) of high metastatic potential had significantly higher median Fgfr4 mRNA than nonmetastatic cell lines (P = 0.01, Mann-Whitney test).