Analysis of breast cancer related gene expression using natural splines and the Cox proportional hazard model to identify prognostic associations.
Breast Cancer Res Treat
; 122(3): 711-20, 2010 Aug.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-19859804
Many studies correlating gene expression data to clinical parameters assume a linear increase or decrease of the clinical parameter under investigation with the expression of a gene. We have studied genes encoding important breast cancer-related proteins using a model for survival-type data that is based on natural splines and the Cox proportional hazard model, thereby removing the linearity assumption. Expression data of 16 genes were studied in relation to metastasis-free probability in a cohort of 295 consecutive breast cancer patients treated at The Netherlands Cancer Institute. The independent predictive power for disease outcome of the 16 individual genes was tested in a multivariable model with known clinical and pathological risk factors. There is a linear relationship between increasing expression and a higher or lower hazard for distant metastasis for ESR1, ERBB4, VEGF, CCNE2, EZH2, and UPA; for ERBB2, ERBB3, CCND1, CCNE1, EED, CXCR4, CCR7, SDF1, and PAI1 there is no clear increase or decrease; and for EGFR there seems to be a non-linear relation. Multivariable analysis showed that the 70-gene prognosis profile outperforms all the other variables in the model (hazard-rate 5.4, 95% CI 2.5-11.7; P = 0.000018). EGFR-expression seems to have a non-linear relation with disease outcome, indicating that lower but also higher expression of EGFR are associated with worse outcome compared to intermediate expression levels; the other genes show no or a linear relation.
Texto completo:
1
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Neoplasias de la Mama
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Biomarcadores de Tumor
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Modelos de Riesgos Proporcionales
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Perfilación de la Expresión Génica
Tipo de estudio:
Diagnostic_studies
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Etiology_studies
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Incidence_studies
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Observational_studies
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Prognostic_studies
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Risk_factors_studies
Límite:
Female
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Humans
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Middle aged
País/Región como asunto:
Europa
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Breast Cancer Res Treat
Año:
2010
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Países Bajos