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Molecular biomarkers of residual disease after surgical debulking of high-grade serous ovarian cancer
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Molecular biomarkers of residual disease after surgical debulking of high-grade serous ovarian cancer

Susan L Tucker, Kshipra Gharpure, Shelley M Herbrich, Anna K Unruh, Alpa M Nick, Erin K Crane, Robert L Coleman, Jamie Guenthoer, Heather J Dalton, Sherry Y Wu, …
Clinical cancer research, Vol.20(12), pp.3280-3288
06/15/2014
PMID: 24756370

Abstract

Alcohol Dehydrogenase - genetics Biomarkers, Tumor - genetics Cohort Studies Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous - genetics Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous - mortality Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous - pathology Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous - surgery Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins - genetics Female Follow-Up Studies Humans Neoplasm Grading Neoplasm, Residual - genetics Neoplasm, Residual - mortality Neoplasm, Residual - pathology Neoplasm, Residual - surgery Ovarian Neoplasms - genetics Ovarian Neoplasms - mortality Ovarian Neoplasms - pathology Ovarian Neoplasms - surgery Prognosis Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction RNA, Messenger - genetics Survival Rate
Residual disease following primary cytoreduction is associated with adverse overall survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. Accurate identification of patients at high risk of residual disease has been elusive, lacking external validity and prompting many to undergo unnecessary surgical exploration. Our goal was to identify and validate molecular markers associated with high rates of residual disease. We interrogated two publicly available datasets from chemonaïve primary high-grade serous ovarian tumors for genes overexpressed in patients with residual disease and significant at a 10% false discovery rate (FDR) in both datasets. We selected genes with wide dynamic range for validation in an independent cohort using quantitative RT-PCR to assay gene expression, followed by blinded prediction of a patient subset at high risk for residual disease. Predictive success was evaluated using a one-sided Fisher exact test. Forty-seven probe sets met the 10% FDR criterion in both datasets. These included FABP4 and ADH1B, which tracked tightly, showed dynamic ranges >16-fold and had high expression levels associated with increased incidence of residual disease. In the validation cohort (n = 139), FABP4 and ADH1B were again highly correlated. Using the top quartile of FABP4 PCR values as a prespecified threshold, we found 30 of 35 cases of residual disease in the predicted high-risk group (positive predictive value = 86%) and 54 of 104 among the remaining patients (P = 0.0002; OR, 5.5). High FABP4 and ADH1B expression is associated with significantly higher risk of residual disease in high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Patients with high tumoral levels of these genes may be candidates for neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
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https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-0445View
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