- Yang, Lingjian
- Roberts, Darren
- Takhar, Mandeep
- Erho, Nicholas
- Bibby, Becky AS
- Thiruthaneeswaran, Niluja
- Bhandari, Vinayak
- Cheng, Wei-Chen
- Haider, Syed
- McCorry, Amy MB
- McArt, Darragh
- Jain, Suneil
- Alshalalfa, Mohammed
- Ross, Ashley
- Schaffer, Edward
- Den, Robert B
- Jeffrey Karnes, R
- Klein, Eric
- Hoskin, Peter J
- Freedland, Stephen J
- Lamb, Alastair D
- Neal, David E
- Buffa, Francesca M
- Bristow, Robert G
- Boutros, Paul C
- Davicioni, Elai
- Choudhury, Ananya
- West, Catharine ML
- et al.
Background
Hypoxia is associated with a poor prognosis in prostate cancer. This work aimed to derive and validate a hypoxia-related mRNA signature for localized prostate cancer.Method
Hypoxia genes were identified in vitro via RNA-sequencing and combined with in vivo gene co-expression analysis to generate a signature. The signature was independently validated in eleven prostate cancer cohorts and a bladder cancer phase III randomized trial of radiotherapy alone or with carbogen and nicotinamide (CON).Results
A 28-gene signature was derived. Patients with high signature scores had poorer biochemical recurrence free survivals in six of eight independent cohorts of prostatectomy-treated patients (Log rank test P < .05), with borderline significances achieved in the other two (P < .1). The signature also predicted biochemical recurrence in patients receiving post-prostatectomy radiotherapy (n = 130, P = .007) or definitive radiotherapy alone (n = 248, P = .035). Lastly, the signature predicted metastasis events in a pooled cohort (n = 631, P = .002). Prognostic significance remained after adjusting for clinic-pathological factors and commercially available prognostic signatures. The signature predicted benefit from hypoxia-modifying therapy in bladder cancer patients (intervention-by-signature interaction test P = .0026), where carbogen and nicotinamide was associated with improved survival only in hypoxic tumours.Conclusion
A 28-gene hypoxia signature has strong and independent prognostic value for prostate cancer patients.