Abstract

BackgroundThyroid cancer is the most common endocrine tumor with a steady increase in incidence. It is classified into multiple histopathological subtypes with potentially distinct molecular mechanisms. Identifying the most relevant genes and biological pathways reported in the thyroid cancer literature is vital for understanding of the disease and developing targeted therapeutics.ResultsWe developed a large-scale text mining system to generate a molecular profiling of thyroid cancer subtypes. The system first uses a subtype classification method for the thyroid cancer literature, which employs a scoring scheme to assign different subtypes to articles. We evaluated the classification method on a gold standard derived from the PubMed Supplementary Concept annotations, achieving a micro-average F1-score of 85.9% for primary subtypes. We then used the subtype classification results to extract genes and pathways associated with different thyroid cancer subtypes and successfully unveiled important genes and pathways, including some instances that are missing from current manually annotated databases or most recent review articles.ConclusionsIdentification of key genes and pathways plays a central role in understanding the molecular biology of thyroid cancer. An integration of subtype context can allow prioritized screening for diagnostic biomarkers and novel molecular targeted therapeutics. Source code used for this study is made freely available online at https://github.com/chengkun-wu/GenesThyCan.

Highlights

  • Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine tumor with a steady increase in incidence

  • Identification of key genes and pathways plays a central role in understanding the molecular biology of thyroid cancer

  • In this paper we presented an approach to finding molecular information associated with different subtypes of thyroid cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine tumor with a steady increase in incidence. It is classified into multiple histopathological subtypes with potentially distinct molecular mechanisms. Thyroid tumours are usually classified into multiple subtypes according to their histopathological characteristics, and treatments are selected depending on the subtype and stage of thyroid cancer. The main subtypes include papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), follicular thyroid cancer (FTC), anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) and medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) [4]. Cellular origins and some of the known molecular mechanisms differ for each subtype [5], which may include subtype-specific alterations in DNA methylation patterns [3] and have led to new therapeutic approaches based on the molecular signature of the tumours

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