A qualitative transcriptional signature for the early diagnosis of colorectal cancer
Currently, using biopsy specimens for the early diagnosis of colorectal cancer (CRC) is not entirely reliable due to insufficient sampling amount and inaccurate sampling location. Thus, it is necessary to develop a signature that can accurately identify patients with CRC under these clinical scenari...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cancer science 2019-10, Vol.110 (10), p.3225-3234 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Currently, using biopsy specimens for the early diagnosis of colorectal cancer (CRC) is not entirely reliable due to insufficient sampling amount and inaccurate sampling location. Thus, it is necessary to develop a signature that can accurately identify patients with CRC under these clinical scenarios. Based on the relative expression orderings of genes within individual samples, we developed a qualitative transcriptional signature to discriminate CRC tissues, including CRC adjacent normal tissues from non‐CRC individuals. The signature was validated using multiple microarray and RNA sequencing data from different sources. In the training data, a signature consisting of 7 gene pairs was identified. It was well validated in both biopsy and surgical resection specimens from multiple datasets measured by different platforms. For biopsy specimens, 97.6% of 42 CRC tissues and 94.5% of 163 non‐CRC (normal or inflammatory bowel disease) tissues were correctly classified. For surgically resected specimens, 99.5% of 854 CRC tissues and 96.3% of 81 CRC adjacent normal tissues were correctly identified as CRC. Notably, we additionally measured 33 CRC biopsy specimens by the Affymetrix platform and 13 CRC surgical resection specimens, with different proportions of tumor epithelial cells, ranging from 40% to 100%, by the RNA sequencing platform, and all these samples were correctly identified as CRC. The signature can be used for the early diagnosis of CRC, which is also suitable for minimum biopsy specimens and inaccurately sampled specimens, and thus has potential value for clinical application.
Using biopsy and surgically resected specimens from public data and our laboratory, we showed that our relative expression ordering‐based signature is suitable for the early diagnosis of colorectal cancer, even when the specimen was sampled inaccurately. Moreover, we showed that the signature is robust to clinicopathological variations and varied proportions of tumor epithelial cells in specimens sampled from different tumor locations of the same patients. |
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ISSN: | 1347-9032 1349-7006 |
DOI: | 10.1111/cas.14137 |