Abstract

Tumor budding, a microscopic finding of dedifferentiation at the invasive margin, has been reported as a definite prognostic marker in colon cancer (CC). Herein, we aimed to generate a molecular budding signature (MBS) based on DNA microarray data and to examine its prognostic significance. Frozen tissue samples from 85 patients with stage II/III CC were used for DNA microarray analyses. First, we selected candidate genes that were differentially expressed (twofold change) between the invasive frontal regions and corresponding tumor centers of three extremely high-grade budding tumors. Subsequently, using microarray data from whole-tissue sections of the 85 patients, we selected MBS-constituent genes from the candidates based on correlation to the pathological budding grade. The MBS score was calculated using the sum of the logarithm of the expression of each gene. We selected seven MBS-constituent genes: MSLN, SLC4A11, WNT11, SCEL, RUNX2, MGAT3, FOXC1. A comparison of relapse-free survival (RFS) rates revealed a significant impact of the MBS score [5-year RFS, 77.4% (score-high) vs. 95.1% (score-low); P = 0.044]. Analyses of public databases revealed that low MBS score patients exhibited better prognosis than those with high-score cancers (GSE14333: 5-year RFS, 83.1% vs. 66.6%, P = 0.028; GSE39582: 5-year disease-free survival, 72.2% vs. 58.1%, P = 0.0005). Multivariate analysis revealed that the MBS score is an independent prognostic indicator in GSE39582 (hazard ratio, 1.611; P = 0.013). We developed a new gene classification method, i.e., MBS, and demonstrated its clinical relevance as an indicator of high recurrence risk of CC.

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