A validated gene expression model of high-risk multiple myeloma is defined by deregulated expression of genes mapping to chromosome 1

John D. Shaughnessy(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Fenghuang Zhan(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Bart Burington(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Yongsheng Huang(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Simona Colla(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Ichiro Hanamura(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Peter Stewart(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Bob Kordsmeier(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Christopher E. Randolph(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), David R. Williams(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Yan Xiao(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Hongwei Xu(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Joshua Epstein(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Elias Anaissie(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Somashekar G. Krishna(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Michele Cottler‐Fox(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Klaus Hollmig(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Abid Mohiuddin(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Mauricio Pineda‐Roman(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Guido Tricot(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Frits van Rhee(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Jeffrey R. Sawyer(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Yazan Alsayed(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Ronald C. Walker(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Maurizio Zangari(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), John Crowley(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Bart Barlogie(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences)
Blood
November 14, 2006
Cited by 916

Abstract

To molecularly define high-risk disease, we performed microarray analysis on tumor cells from 532 newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma (MM) treated on 2 separate protocols. Using log-rank tests of expression quartiles, 70 genes, 30% mapping to chromosome 1 (P < .001), were linked to early disease-related death. Importantly, most up-regulated genes mapped to chromosome 1q, and down-regulated genes mapped to chromosome 1p. The ratio of mean expression levels of up-regulated to down-regulated genes defined a high-risk score present in 13% of patients with shorter durations of complete remission, event-free survival, and overall survival (training set: hazard ratio [HR], 5.16; P < .001; test cohort: HR, 4.75; P < .001). The high-risk score also was an independent predictor of outcome endpoints in multivariate analysis (P < .001) that included the International Staging System and high-risk translocations. In a comparison of paired baseline and relapse samples, the high-risk score frequency rose to 76% at relapse and predicted short postrelapse survival (P < .05). Multivariate discriminant analysis revealed that a 17-gene subset could predict outcome as well as the 70-gene model. Our data suggest that altered transcriptional regulation of genes mapping to chromosome 1 may contribute to disease progression, and that expression profiling can be used to identify high-risk disease and guide therapeutic interventions.


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