Predicting relapse in favorable histology wilms tumor using gene expression analysis: A report from the renal tumor committee of the children's oncology group

Chiang Ching Huang, Samantha Gadd, Norman Breslow, Colleen Cutcliffe, Simone T. Sredni, Irene B. Helenowski, Jeffrey S. Dome, Paul E. Grundy, Daniel M. Green, Michael K. Fritsch, Elizabeth J. Perlman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

45 Scopus citations

Abstract

The past two decades has seen significant improvement in the overall survival of patients with favorable histology Wilms tumor (FHWT); however, this progress has reached a plateau. Further improvements may rely on the ability to better stratify patients by riskof relapse. This study determines the feasibility and potential clinical utility of classifiers of relapse based on global gene expression analysis. Experimental Design: Two hundred fifty FHWT of all stages enriched for relapses treated on National Wilms Tumor Study-5 passed quality variables and were suitable for analysis using oligonucleotide arrays. Relapse risk stratification used support vector machine; 2- and 10-fold cross-validations were applied. Results: The number of genes associated with relapse was less than that predicted by chance alone for 106 patients (32 relapses) with stages I and II FHWT treated with chemotherapy, and no further analyses were done. This number was greater than expected by chance for 76 local stage III patients. Cross-validation including an additional 68 local stage III patients (total 144 patients, 53 relapses) showed that classifiers for relapse composed of 50 genes were associated with a median sensitivity of 47% and specificity of 70%. Conclusions: This study shows the feasibility and modest accuracy of stratifying local stage III FHWT using a classifier of <50 genes.Validation using an independent patient population is needed. Analysis of genes differentially expressed in relapse patients revealed apoptosis, Wnt signaling, insulin-like growth factor pathway, and epigenetic modification to be mechanisms important in relapse. Potential therapeutic targets include FRAP/MTOR and CD40.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1770-1778
Number of pages9
JournalClinical Cancer Research
Volume15
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2009

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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