Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)

Prognostic value of a 25-gene assay in patients with gastric cancer after curative resection

  • Xiaohong Wang,
  • Yiqiang Liu,
  • Zhaojian Niu,
  • Runjia Fu,
  • Yongning Jia,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Duanfang Shao,
  • Hong Du,
  • Ying Hu,
  • Xiaofang Xing,
  • Xiaojing Cheng,
  • Lin Li,
  • Ting Guo,
  • Ziyu Li,
  • Qunsheng Ji,
  • Lianhai Zhang,
  • Jiafu Ji

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07604-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract This study aimed to develop and validate a practical, reliable assay for prognosis and chemotherapy benefit prediction compared with conventional staging in Gastric cancer (GC). Twenty-three candidate genes with significant correlation between quantitative hybridization and microarray results plus 2 reference genes were selected to form a 25-gene prognostic classifier, which can classify patients into 3 distinct groups of different risk of mortality obtained by analyzing microarray data from 78 frozen tumor specimens. The 25-gene assay was associated with overall survival in both training (P = 0.017) and testing cohort (P = 0.005) (462 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples). The risk prediction in stages I + II is significantly better than that in stages III. Analysis demonstrated that this 25-gene signature is an independent prognostic predictor and show higher prognostic accuracy than conventional TNM staging in early stage patients. Moreover, only high-risk patients in stage I + II were found benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy (P = 0.043), while low-risk patients in stage III were not found benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. In conclusion, our results suggest that this 25-gene assay can reliably identify patients with different risk for mortality after surgery, especially for stage I + II patients, and might be able to predict patients who benefit from chemotherapy.