<i>PAX3/FOXO1</i> Fusion Gene Status Is the Key Prognostic Molecular Marker in Rhabdomyosarcoma and Significantly Improves Current Risk Stratification

Edoardo Missiaglia(Institute of Cancer Research), Dan Williamson(Institute of Cancer Research), Julia Chisholm(Institute of Cancer Research), Pratyaksha Wirapati(Institute of Cancer Research), Gaëlle Pierron(Institute of Cancer Research), Fabien Petel(Institute of Cancer Research), Jean‐Paul Concordet(Institute of Cancer Research), Khin Thway(Institute of Cancer Research), Odile Oberlin(Institute of Cancer Research), Kathy Pritchard‐Jones(Institute of Cancer Research), Olivier Delattre(Institute of Cancer Research), Mauro Delorenzi(Institute of Cancer Research), Janet Shipley(Institute of Cancer Research)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
March 27, 2012
Cited by 360Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: To improve the risk stratification of patients with rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) through the use of clinical and molecular biologic data. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two independent data sets of gene-expression profiling for 124 and 101 patients with RMS were used to derive prognostic gene signatures by using a meta-analysis. These and a previously published metagene signature were evaluated by using cross validation analyses. A combined clinical and molecular risk-stratification scheme that incorporated the PAX3/FOXO1 fusion gene status was derived from 287 patients with RMS and evaluated. RESULTS: We showed that our prognostic gene-expression signature and the one previously published performed well with reproducible and significant effects. However, their effect was reduced when cross validated or tested in independent data and did not add new prognostic information over the fusion gene status, which is simpler to assay. Among nonmetastatic patients, patients who were PAX3/FOXO1 positive had a significantly poorer outcome compared with both alveolar-negative and PAX7/FOXO1-positive patients. Furthermore, a new clinicomolecular risk score that incorporated fusion gene status (negative and PAX3/FOXO1 and PAX7/FOXO1 positive), Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study TNM stage, and age showed a significant increase in performance over the current risk-stratification scheme. CONCLUSION: Gene signatures can improve current stratification of patients with RMS but will require complex assays to be developed and extensive validation before clinical application. A significant majority of their prognostic value was encapsulated by the fusion gene status. A continuous risk score derived from the combination of clinical parameters with the presence or absence of PAX3/FOXO1 represents a robust approach to improving current risk-adapted therapy for RMS.


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