Biostatistics and Computational Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e57799. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057799. Epub 2013 Mar 11.
Although ovarian cancer is often initially chemotherapy-sensitive, the vast majority of tumors eventually relapse and patients die of increasingly aggressive disease. Cancer stem cells are believed to have properties that allow them to survive therapy and may drive recurrent tumor growth. Cancer stem cells or cancer-initiating cells are a rare cell population and difficult to isolate experimentally. Genes that are expressed by stem cells may characterize a subset of less differentiated tumors and aid in prognostic classification of ovarian cancer. The purpose of this study was the genomic identification and characterization of a subtype of ovarian cancer that has stem cell-like gene expression. Using human and mouse gene signatures of embryonic, adult, or cancer stem cells, we performed an unsupervised bipartition class discovery on expression profiles from 145 serous ovarian tumors to identify a stem-like and more differentiated subgroup. Subtypes were reproducible and were further characterized in four independent, heterogeneous ovarian cancer datasets. We identified a stem-like subtype characterized by a 51-gene signature, which is significantly enriched in tumors with properties of Type II ovarian cancer; high grade, serous tumors, and poor survival. Conversely, the differentiated tumors share properties with Type I, including lower grade and mixed histological subtypes. The stem cell-like signature was prognostic within high-stage serous ovarian cancer, classifying a small subset of high-stage tumors with better prognosis, in the differentiated subtype. In multivariate models that adjusted for common clinical factors (including grade, stage, age), the subtype classification was still a significant predictor of relapse. The prognostic stem-like gene signature yields new insights into prognostic differences in ovarian cancer, provides a genomic context for defining Type I/II subtypes, and potential gene targets which following further validation may be valuable in the clinical management or treatment of ovarian cancer.
虽然卵巢癌通常最初对化疗敏感,但绝大多数肿瘤最终会复发,患者死于病情日益恶化。癌症干细胞被认为具有使其能够耐受治疗并可能驱动复发性肿瘤生长的特性。癌症干细胞或起始癌症细胞是一种罕见的细胞群体,难以在实验中分离。表达干细胞的基因可能可以描述肿瘤分化程度较低的亚群,并有助于卵巢癌的预后分类。本研究的目的是鉴定和描述具有干细胞样基因表达的卵巢癌亚型。使用人类和小鼠胚胎、成人或癌症干细胞的基因特征,我们对来自 145 例浆液性卵巢肿瘤的表达谱进行了无监督的二分分类发现,以鉴定出具有干细胞样和更分化的亚群。亚型是可重现的,并在四个独立的、异质的卵巢癌数据集进一步进行了特征描述。我们鉴定出一种具有 51 个基因特征的干细胞样亚型,该特征在具有 II 型卵巢癌特性的肿瘤中显著富集;高级别、浆液性肿瘤和预后不良。相反,分化型肿瘤与 I 型具有相似的特性,包括较低的分级和混合组织学亚型。在高分期浆液性卵巢癌中,干细胞样特征具有预后意义,在分化亚型中,将一小部分高分期肿瘤分为预后较好的亚型。在调整常见临床因素(包括分级、分期、年龄)的多变量模型中,亚型分类仍然是复发的显著预测因子。该预后干细胞样基因特征为卵巢癌的预后差异提供了新的见解,为定义 I/II 型亚型提供了基因组背景,并为潜在的基因靶点提供了新的见解,这些靶点在经过进一步验证后可能对卵巢癌的临床管理或治疗具有重要价值。