Development and Validation of a 28-gene Hypoxia-related Prognostic Signature for Localized Prostate Cancer

Lingjian Yang(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Darren L. Roberts(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Mandeep Takhar(Genome British Columbia), Nicholas Erho(Genome British Columbia), B. Bibby(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Niluja Thiruthaneeswaran(University Health Network), Vinayak Bhandari(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Wei‐Chen Cheng(University of Oxford), Syed Haider(University of Oxford), Amy M.B. McCorry(Queen's University Belfast), Darragh G. McArt(Queen's University Belfast), Suneil Jain(Queen's University Belfast), Mohammed Alshalalfa(Genome British Columbia), Ashley E. Ross(Johns Hopkins University), Edward Schaffer(Northwestern University), Robert B. Den(Thomas Jefferson University), R. Jeffrey Karnes(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Eric A. Klein(Cleveland Clinic), Peter Hoskin(Mount Vernon Cancer Centre), Stephen J. Freedland(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Alastair Lamb(University of Cambridge), David E. Neal(University of Oxford), Francesca M. Buffa(University of Oxford), Robert G. Bristow(University Health Network), Paul C. Boutros(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Elai Davicioni(Genome British Columbia), Ananya Choudhury(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Catharine West(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre)
EBioMedicine
April 23, 2018
Cited by 158Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hypoxia is associated with a poor prognosis in prostate cancer. This work aimed to derive and validate a hypoxia-related mRNA signature for localized prostate cancer. METHOD: Hypoxia genes were identified in vitro via RNA-sequencing and combined with in vivo gene co-expression analysis to generate a signature. The signature was independently validated in eleven prostate cancer cohorts and a bladder cancer phase III randomized trial of radiotherapy alone or with carbogen and nicotinamide (CON). RESULTS: A 28-gene signature was derived. Patients with high signature scores had poorer biochemical recurrence free survivals in six of eight independent cohorts of prostatectomy-treated patients (Log rank test P < .05), with borderline significances achieved in the other two (P < .1). The signature also predicted biochemical recurrence in patients receiving post-prostatectomy radiotherapy (n = 130, P = .007) or definitive radiotherapy alone (n = 248, P = .035). Lastly, the signature predicted metastasis events in a pooled cohort (n = 631, P = .002). Prognostic significance remained after adjusting for clinic-pathological factors and commercially available prognostic signatures. The signature predicted benefit from hypoxia-modifying therapy in bladder cancer patients (intervention-by-signature interaction test P = .0026), where carbogen and nicotinamide was associated with improved survival only in hypoxic tumours. CONCLUSION: A 28-gene hypoxia signature has strong and independent prognostic value for prostate cancer patients.


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