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Identification of protein-coding and non-coding RNA expression profiles as prognostic marker of prostate cancer biochemical recurrence

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Author(s):
Yuri José de Camargo Barros Moreira
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Conjunto das Químicas (IQ e FCF) (CQ/DBDCQ)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Sergio Verjovski de Almeida; Dirce Maria Carraro; Emmanuel Dias Neto; Fábio Luís Forti; Sandro José de Souza
Advisor: Sergio Verjovski de Almeida
Abstract

Prostate cancer is the fifth most common type of cancer in the world, and the most common in men. Clinical and anatomo-pathological factors currently used in clinic are not able to distinguish between the indolent and the aggressive disease. There is a major need of new prognostic makers in order to improve the clinical management of prostate cancer patients. Apart from abnormalities in protein-coding genes, changes in non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) contribute to the pathogenesis of cancer and thus represent another potential source of prostate cancer biomarkers. However, few studies of expression profiles of ncRNAs have been published. This project aimed to identify expression profiles of protein-coding and non-coding genes correlated to prostate cancer biochemical recurrence. For this, we analyzed the expression profile of 42 prostate cancer samples from patients undergoing radical prostatectomy, with long follow-up (five years), and know disease outcome. We used a custom microarray designed by us and printed by Agilent, that probes 18,709 long (>500 nt) ncRNAs mapping to intronic regions within 5,660 genomic loci. The expression data were extracted from each array and normalized across all 42 samples. Using a multiple random sampling validation strategy, we identified an expression profile of poor prognosis, comprising 51 ncRNAs. The prognostic profile of ncRNAs was applied to an independent test set of 22 patients, correctly classifying 82% of the samples. A Kaplan-Meier analysis of the test set of patients indicated that the survival curves of high and low risk groups were significantly different (Log-rank test p = 0.0009, Hazard ratio = 23.4, 95% CI = 3.62 to 151.2) thus confirming that this classifier is useful for identifying patients at high risk of recurrence. Furthermore, these findings indicate a potential role of these intronic non-coding RNAs in the progression of prostate tumors and points to the intronic ncRNAs as potential new markers of cancer. (AU)