Transcription profiling of untreated and cisplatin-based chemoradiation treated human squamous cell carcinomas to improve prediction of outcome after chemoradiation
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ABSTRACT: Gene expression profiling to predict outcome after chemoradiation in head and neck cancer Purpose. The goal of the present study was to improve prediction of outcome after chemoradiation in advanced head and neck cancer using gene expression analysis. Materials and Methods. We collected 92 biopsies from untreated head and neck cancer patients subsequently given cisplatin-based chemoradiation (RADPLAT) for advanced squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC). After RNA extraction and labeling we performed dye swap experiments using 35k oligo-microarrays. Supervised analyses were performed to create classifiers to predict local control, locoregional control and disease recurrence. Published gene sets with prognostic value in other studies were also tested. Results. Using supervised classification on the whole series, gene sets separating good and poor outcome could be found for all end-points. However, when splitting tumors into training and validation groups, no robust classifiers could be found. Also previously published signatures with prognostic value have been tested. Conclusion. Gene sets can be found with predictive potential for locoregional control after combined radiation and chemotherapy in HNSCC. How treatment-specific these gene sets are needs further study.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
SUBMITTER: Cor Lieftink
PROVIDER: E-NCMF-8 | biostudies-arrayexpress |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress
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