Module-based outcome prediction using breast cancer compendia
- PMID: 17940611
- PMCID: PMC2002511
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001047
Module-based outcome prediction using breast cancer compendia
Abstract
Background: The availability of large collections of microarray datasets (compendia), or knowledge about grouping of genes into pathways (gene sets), is typically not exploited when training predictors of disease outcome. These can be useful since a compendium increases the number of samples, while gene sets reduce the size of the feature space. This should be favorable from a machine learning perspective and result in more robust predictors.
Methodology: We extracted modules of regulated genes from gene sets, and compendia. Through supervised analysis, we constructed predictors which employ modules predictive of breast cancer outcome. To validate these predictors we applied them to independent data, from the same institution (intra-dataset), and other institutions (inter-dataset).
Conclusions: We show that modules derived from single breast cancer datasets achieve better performance on the validation data compared to gene-based predictors. We also show that there is a trend in compendium specificity and predictive performance: modules derived from a single breast cancer dataset, and a breast cancer specific compendium perform better compared to those derived from a human cancer compendium. Additionally, the module-based predictor provides a much richer insight into the underlying biology. Frequently selected gene sets are associated with processes such as cell cycle, E2F regulation, DNA damage response, proteasome and glycolysis. We analyzed two modules related to cell cycle, and the OCT1 transcription factor, respectively. On an individual basis, these modules provide a significant separation in survival subgroups on the training and independent validation data.
Conflict of interest statement
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References
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- Van de Vijver M, He Y, van 't Veer L, Dai H, Hart A, et al. A gene-expression signature as a predictor of survival in breast cancer. N. Engl. J. Med. 2002;25:1999–2009. - PubMed
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