PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Developing a prognostic micro-RNA signature for human cervical carcinoma.

  • Christine How,
  • Melania Pintilie,
  • Jeff P Bruce,
  • Angela B Y Hui,
  • Blaise A Clarke,
  • Philip Wong,
  • Shaoming Yin,
  • Rui Yan,
  • Daryl Waggott,
  • Paul C Boutros,
  • Anthony Fyles,
  • David W Hedley,
  • Richard P Hill,
  • Michael Milosevic,
  • Fei-Fei Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123946
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e0123946

Abstract

Read online

Cervical cancer remains the third most frequently diagnosed and fourth leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide. We sought to develop a micro-RNA signature that was prognostic for disease-free survival, which could potentially allow tailoring of treatment for cervical cancer patients. A candidate prognostic 9-micro-RNA signature set was identified in the training set of 79 frozen specimens. However, three different approaches to validate this signature in an independent cohort of 87 patients with formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) specimens, were unsuccessful. There are several challenges and considerations associated with developing a prognostic micro-RNA signature for cervical cancer, namely: tumour heterogeneity, lack of concordance between frozen and FFPE specimens, and platform selection for global micro-RNA expression profiling in this disease. Our observations provide an important cautionary tale for future miRNA signature studies for cervical cancer, which can also be potentially applicable to miRNA profiling studies involving other types of human malignancies.