Effectiveness of Gene Expression Profiling for Response Prediction of Rectal Adenocarcinomas to Preoperative Chemoradiotherapy

Β. Michael Ghadimi(National Institutes of Health), Marian Grade(National Institutes of Health), Michael J. Difilippantonio(National Institutes of Health), Sudhir Varma(National Institutes of Health), Richard Simon(National Institutes of Health), Cristina Montagna(National Institutes of Health), L. Füzesi(National Institutes of Health), Claus Langer(National Institutes of Health), Heinz Becker(National Institutes of Health), Torsten Liersch(National Institutes of Health), Thomas Ried(National Institutes of Health)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
March 18, 2005
Cited by 346Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: There is a wide spectrum of tumor responsiveness of rectal adenocarcinomas to preoperative chemoradiotherapy ranging from complete response to complete resistance. This study aimed to investigate whether parallel gene expression profiling of the primary tumor can contribute to stratification of patients into groups of responders or nonresponders. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Pretherapeutic biopsies from 30 locally advanced rectal carcinomas were analyzed for gene expression signatures using microarrays. All patients were participants of a phase III clinical trial (CAO/ARO/AIO-94, German Rectal Cancer Trial) and were randomized to receive a preoperative combined-modality therapy including fluorouracil and radiation. Class comparison was used to identify a set of genes that were differentially expressed between responders and nonresponders as measured by T level downsizing and histopathologic tumor regression grading. RESULTS: In an initial set of 23 patients, responders and nonresponders showed significantly different expression levels for 54 genes (P < .001). The ability to predict response to therapy using gene expression profiles was rigorously evaluated using leave-one-out cross-validation. Tumor behavior was correctly predicted in 83% of patients (P = .02). Sensitivity (correct prediction of response) was 78%, and specificity (correct prediction of nonresponse) was 86%, with a positive and negative predictive value of 78% and 86%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that pretherapeutic gene expression profiling may assist in response prediction of rectal adenocarcinomas to preoperative chemoradiotherapy. The implementation of gene expression profiles for treatment stratification and clinical management of cancer patients requires validation in large, independent studies, which are now warranted.


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