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Development of a minimally invasive molecular biomarker for early detection of lung cancer

The diagnostic evaluation of ever smokers with pulmonary nodules represents a growing clinical challenge due to the implementation of lung cancer screening. The high false-positive rate of screening frequently results in the use of unnecessary invasive procedures in patients who are ultimately diagnosed as benign, clearly highlighting the need for additional diagnostic approaches. We previously derived and validated a bronchial epithelial gene-expression biomarker to detect lung cancer in ever smokers. However, bronchoscopy is not always chosen as a diagnostic modality. Given that bronchial and nasal epithelial gene-expression are similarly altered by cigarette smoke exposure, we sought to determine if cancer-associated gene-expression might also be detectable in the more readily accessible nasal epithelium.

Nasal epithelial brushings were prospectively collected from ever smokers undergoing diagnostic evaluation for lung cancer in the AEGIS-1 (n=375) and AEGIS-2 (n=130) clinical trials and gene-expression profiled using microarrays. The computational framework used to discover biomarkers in these data was formalized and implemented in an open-source R-package.

We identified 535 genes in the nasal epithelium of AEGIS-1 patients whose expression was associated with lung cancer status. Using matched bronchial gene-expression data from a subset of these patients, we found significantly concordant cancer-associated gene-expression alterations between the two airway sites. A nasal lung cancer classifier derived in the AEGIS-1 cohort that combined clinical factors and nasal gene-expression had significantly higher AUC (0.81) and sensitivity (0.91) than the clinical-factor model alone in independent samples from the AEGIS-2 cohort. These results support that the airway epithelial field of lung cancer-associated injury extends to the nose and demonstrates the potential of using nasal gene-expression as a non-invasive biomarker for lung cancer detection.

The framework for deriving this biomarker was generalized and implemented in an open-source R-package. The package provides a computational pipeline to compare biomarker development strategies using microarray data. The results from this pipeline can be used to highlight the optimal model development parameters for a given dataset leading to more robust and accurate models. This package provides the community with a novel and powerful tool to facilitate biomarker discovery in microarray data.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/21969
Date24 March 2017
CreatorsPerez-Rogers, Joseph
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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