Frontiers in Endocrinology (Sep 2023)

A clinically useful and biologically informative genomic classifier for papillary thyroid cancer

  • Steven Craig,
  • Steven Craig,
  • Cynthia Stretch,
  • Farshad Farshidfar,
  • Dropen Sheka,
  • Nikolay Alabi,
  • Ashar Siddiqui,
  • Karen Kopciuk,
  • Karen Kopciuk,
  • Young Joo Park,
  • Young Joo Park,
  • Moosa Khalil,
  • Faisal Khan,
  • Faisal Khan,
  • Adrian Harvey,
  • Oliver F. Bathe,
  • Oliver F. Bathe,
  • Oliver F. Bathe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1220617
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Clinical management of papillary thyroid cancer depends on estimations of prognosis. Standard care, which relies on prognostication based on clinicopathologic features, is inaccurate. We applied a machine learning algorithm (HighLifeR) to 502 cases annotated by The Cancer Genome Atlas Project to derive an accurate molecular prognostic classifier. Unsupervised analysis of the 82 genes that were most closely associated with recurrence after surgery enabled the identification of three unique molecular subtypes. One subtype had a high recurrence rate, an immunosuppressed microenvironment, and enrichment of the EZH2-HOTAIR pathway. Two other unique molecular subtypes with a lower rate of recurrence were identified, including one subtype with a paucity of BRAFV600E mutations and a high rate of RAS mutations. The genomic risk classifier, in addition to tumor size and lymph node status, enabled effective prognostication that outperformed the American Thyroid Association clinical risk stratification. The genomic classifier we derived can potentially be applied preoperatively to direct clinical decision-making. Distinct biological features of molecular subtypes also have implications regarding sensitivity to radioactive iodine, EZH2 inhibitors, and immune checkpoint inhibitors.

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