Abstract

BackgroundKidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC) is a type of cancer that is resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy and has limited treatment possibilities. Large-scale molecular profiling of KIRC tumors offers a great potential to uncover the genetic and epigenetic changes underlying this disease and to improve the clinical management of KIRC patients. However, in practice the clinicians and researchers typically focus on single-platform molecular data or on a small set of genes. Using molecular and clinical data of over 500 patients, we have systematically studied which type of molecular data is the most informative in predicting the clinical outcome of KIRC patients, as a standalone platform and integrated with clinical data.ResultsWe applied different computational approaches to preselect on survival-predictive genomic markers and evaluated the usability of mRNA/miRNA/protein expression data, copy number variation (CNV) data and DNA methylation data in predicting survival of KIRC patients. Our analyses show that expression and methylation data have statistically significant predictive powers compared to a random guess, but do not perform better than predictions on clinical data alone. However, the integration of molecular data with clinical variables resulted in improved predictions. We present a set of survival associated genomic loci that could potentially be employed as clinically useful biomarkers.ConclusionsOur study evaluates the survival prediction of different large-scale molecular data of KIRC patients and describes the prognostic relevance of such data over clinical-variable-only models. It also demonstrates the survival prognostic importance of methylation alterations in KIRC tumors and points to the potential of epigenetic modulators in KIRC treatment.ReviewersAn extended abstract of this research paper was selected for the CAMDA Satellite Meeting to ISMB 2015 by the CAMDA Programme Committee. The full research paper then underwent one round of Open Peer Review under a responsible CAMDA Programme Committee member, Djork-Arné Clevert, PhD (Bayer AG, Germany). Open Peer Review was provided by Martin Otava, PhD (Janssen Pharmaceutica, Belgium) and Hendrik Luuk, PhD (The Centre for Disease Models and Biomedical Imaging, University of Tartu, Estonia). The Reviewer comments section shows the full reviews and author responses.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13062-016-0170-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC) is a type of cancer that is resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy and has limited treatment possibilities

  • Identification of molecular signatures associated with overall patient survival in kidney renal clear cell carcinoma To identify molecular signatures linked to patient survival in Kidney Renal Clear Cell Carcinoma (KIRC) we used clinical and multi-omics data from 533 patients

  • We only considered patients that died within the first year of diagnosis and patients that survived more than 5 years, and for each omics entity we sought to determine if there are significant differences in the measured levels between the two groups of patients

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Summary

Introduction

Kidney renal clear cell carcinoma (KIRC) is a type of cancer that is resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy and has limited treatment possibilities. Multi-omics datasets are available for many cancers and provide a plethora of molecular details about the tumor tissues. The generation of these datasets has been driven by technological advancements that made genetic, epigenetic, transcriptomic and proteomic profiling possible. These data are informative for multiple aspects ranging from discovering of new markers for more accurate cancer diagnosis and prognosis, to development of new therapeutics and personalized treatments.

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