Intrinsic subtypes of high-grade bladder cancer reflect the hallmarks of breast cancer biology

Jeffrey S. Damrauer(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Katherine A. Hoadley(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), David D. Chism(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Cheng Fan(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Christopher J. Tiganelli(Delaware Division of Libraries), Sara E. Wobker(Emory University Hospital), Jen Jen Yeh(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Matthew I. Milowsky(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Gopa Iyer(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Joel S. Parker(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), William Y. Kim(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 11, 2014
Cited by 886Open Access
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Abstract

We sought to define whether there are intrinsic molecular subtypes of high-grade bladder cancer. Consensus clustering performed on gene expression data from a meta-dataset of high-grade, muscle-invasive bladder tumors identified two intrinsic, molecular subsets of high-grade bladder cancer, termed "luminal" and "basal-like," which have characteristics of different stages of urothelial differentiation, reflect the luminal and basal-like molecular subtypes of breast cancer, and have clinically meaningful differences in outcome. A gene set predictor, bladder cancer analysis of subtypes by gene expression (BASE47) was defined by prediction analysis of microarrays (PAM) and accurately classifies the subtypes. Our data demonstrate that there are at least two molecularly and clinically distinct subtypes of high-grade bladder cancer and validate the BASE47 as a subtype predictor. Future studies exploring the predictive value of the BASE47 subtypes for standard of care bladder cancer therapies, as well as novel subtype-specific therapies, will be of interest.


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