Gene-expression profiles predict survival of patients with lung adenocarcinoma

DG Beer, SLR Kardia, CC Huang, TJ Giordano… - Nature medicine, 2002 - nature.com
DG Beer, SLR Kardia, CC Huang, TJ Giordano, AM Levin, DE Misek, L Lin, G Chen…
Nature medicine, 2002nature.com
Histopathology is insufficient to predict disease progression and clinical outcome in lung
adenocarcinoma. Here we show that gene-expression profiles based on microarray analysis
can be used to predict patient survival in early-stage lung adenocarcinomas. Genes most
related to survival were identified with univariate Cox analysis. Using either two equivalent
but independent training and testing sets, or'leave-one-out'cross-validation analysis with all
tumors, a risk index based on the top 50 genes identified low-risk and high-risk stage I lung …
Abstract
Histopathology is insufficient to predict disease progression and clinical outcome in lung adenocarcinoma. Here we show that gene-expression profiles based on microarray analysis can be used to predict patient survival in early-stage lung adenocarcinomas. Genes most related to survival were identified with univariate Cox analysis. Using either two equivalent but independent training and testing sets, or 'leave-one-out' cross-validation analysis with all tumors, a risk index based on the top 50 genes identified low-risk and high-risk stage I lung adenocarcinomas, which differed significantly with respect to survival. This risk index was then validated using an independent sample of lung adenocarcinomas that predicted high- and low-risk groups. This index included genes not previously associated with survival. The identification of a set of genes that predict survival in early-stage lung adenocarcinoma allows delineation of a high-risk group that may benefit from adjuvant therapy.
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