Prediction of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer outcomes assessed by innovative multimarker prognostic models

We adapted Bayesian statistical learning strategies to the prognosis field to investigate if genome-wide common SNP improve the prediction ability of clinico-pathological prognosticators and applied it to non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) patients. Adapted Bayesian sequential threshold mode...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC cancer 2016-06, Vol.16 (1), p.351, Article 351
Hauptverfasser: López de Maturana, E, Picornell, A, Masson-Lecomte, A, Kogevinas, M, Márquez, M, Carrato, A, Tardón, A, Lloreta, J, García-Closas, M, Silverman, D, Rothman, N, Chanock, S, Real, F X, Goddard, M E, Malats, N
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We adapted Bayesian statistical learning strategies to the prognosis field to investigate if genome-wide common SNP improve the prediction ability of clinico-pathological prognosticators and applied it to non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) patients. Adapted Bayesian sequential threshold models in combination with LASSO were applied to consider the time-to-event and the censoring nature of data. We studied 822 NMIBC patients followed-up >10 years. The study outcomes were time-to-first-recurrence and time-to-progression. The predictive ability of the models including up to 171,304 SNP and/or 6 clinico-pathological prognosticators was evaluated using AUC-ROC and determination coefficient. Clinico-pathological prognosticators explained a larger proportion of the time-to-first-recurrence (3.1 %) and time-to-progression (5.4 %) phenotypic variances than SNPs (1 and 0.01 %, respectively). Adding SNPs to the clinico-pathological-parameters model slightly improved the prediction of time-to-first-recurrence (up to 4 %). The prediction of time-to-progression using both clinico-pathological prognosticators and SNP did not improve. Heritability (ĥ (2)) of both outcomes was
ISSN:1471-2407
1471-2407
DOI:10.1186/s12885-016-2361-7