Tumour gene expression signature in primary melanoma predicts long-term outcomes
Authors
Yan, Yibing
Lauss, Martin
Jönsson, Göran B.
Newton-Bishop, Julia
Parkinson, Christine
McDonald, Sarah
Stefanos, Nikki
Wilmott, James S.
Long, Georgina V.
Corrie, Pippa
Publication Date
2021-02-18Journal Title
Nature Communications
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Volume
12
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Garg, M., Couturier, D., Nsengimana, J., Fonseca, N. A., Wongchenko, M., Yan, Y., Lauss, M., et al. (2021). Tumour gene expression signature in primary melanoma predicts long-term outcomes. Nature Communications, 12 (1) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21207-2
Description
Funder: University of Sydney Medical Foundation
Funder: Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC); doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100000925
Abstract
Abstract: Adjuvant systemic therapies are now routinely used following resection of stage III melanoma, however accurate prognostic information is needed to better stratify patients. We use differential expression analyses of primary tumours from 204 RNA-sequenced melanomas within a large adjuvant trial, identifying a 121 metastasis-associated gene signature. This signature strongly associated with progression-free (HR = 1.63, p = 5.24 × 10−5) and overall survival (HR = 1.61, p = 1.67 × 10−4), was validated in 175 regional lymph nodes metastasis as well as two externally ascertained datasets. The machine learning classification models trained using the signature genes performed significantly better in predicting metastases than models trained with clinical covariates (pAUROC = 7.03 × 10−4), or published prognostic signatures (pAUROC < 0.05). The signature score negatively correlated with measures of immune cell infiltration (ρ = −0.75, p < 2.2 × 10−16), with a higher score representing reduced lymphocyte infiltration and a higher 5-year risk of death in stage II melanoma. Our expression signature identifies melanoma patients at higher risk of metastases and warrants further evaluation in adjuvant clinical trials.
Keywords
Article, /631/67/69, /631/67/1813/1634, /631/67/1857, /45/91, /38/39, /38/90, /141, article
Identifiers
s41467-021-21207-2, 21207
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21207-2
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337245
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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