A Unique Metastasis Gene Signature Enables Prediction of Tumor Relapse in Early-Stage Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients

Stéphanie Roessler(National Institutes of Health), Hu-Liang Jia(National Institutes of Health), Anuradha Budhu(National Institutes of Health), Marshonna Forgues(National Institutes of Health), Qing-Hai Ye(National Institutes of Health), Ju‐Seog Lee(National Institutes of Health), Snorri S. Thorgeirsson(National Institutes of Health), Zhongtang Sun(National Institutes of Health), Zhao-You Tang(National Institutes of Health), Lun‐Xiu Qin(National Institutes of Health), Xin Wei Wang(National Institutes of Health)
Cancer Research
December 14, 2010
Cited by 1,091Open Access
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Abstract

Metastasis-related recurrence often occurs in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients who receive curative therapies. At present, it is challenging to identify patients with high risk of recurrence, which would warrant additional therapies. In this study, we sought to analyze a recently developed metastasis-related gene signature for its utility in predicting HCC survival, using 2 independent cohorts consisting of a total of 386 patients who received radical resection. Cohort 1 contained 247 predominantly HBV-positive cases analyzed with an Affymetrix platform, whereas cohort 2 contained 139 cases with mixed etiology analyzed with the NCI Oligo Set microarray platform. We employed a survival risk prediction algorithm with training, test, and independent cross-validation strategies and found that the gene signature is predictive of overall and disease-free survival. Importantly, risk was significantly predicted independently of clinical characteristics and microarray platform. In addition, survival prediction was successful in patients with early disease, such as small (<5 cm in diameter) and solitary tumors, and the signature predicted particularly well for early recurrence risk (<2 years), especially when combined with serum alpha fetoprotein or tumor staging. In conclusion, we have shown in 2 independent cohorts with mixed etiologies and ethnicity that the metastasis gene signature is a useful tool to predict HCC outcome, suggesting the general utility of this classifier. We recommend the use of this classifier as a molecular diagnostic test to assess the risk that an HCC patient will develop tumor relapse within 2 years after surgical resection, particularly for those with early-stage tumors and solitary presentation.


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