@article{41352f15a9d74cc98a33538947b36f78,
title = "Large meta-analysis of multiple cancers reveals a common, compact and highly prognostic hypoxia metagene",
abstract = "Background: There is a need to develop robust and clinically applicable gene expression signatures. Hypoxia is a key factor promoting solid tumour progression and resistance to therapy; a hypoxia signature has the potential to be not only prognostic but also to predict benefit from particular interventions. Methods: An approach for deriving signatures that combine knowledge of gene function and analysis of in vivo co-expression patterns was used to define a common hypoxia signature from three head and neck and five breast cancer studies. Previously validated hypoxia-regulated genes (seeds) were used to generate hypoxia co-expression cancer networks. Results: A common hypoxia signature, or metagene, was derived by selecting genes that were consistently co-expressed with the hypoxia seeds in multiple cancers. This was highly enriched for hypoxia-regulated pathways, and prognostic in multivariate analyses. Genes with the highest connectivity were also the most prognostic, and a reduced metagene consisting of a small number of top-ranked genes, including VEGFA, SLC2A1 and PGAM1, outperformed both a larger signature and reported signatures in independent data sets of head and neck, breast and lung cancers. Conclusion: Combined knowledge of multiple genes' function from in vitro experiments together with meta-analysis of multiple cancers can deliver compact and robust signatures suitable for clinical application. {\textcopyright} 2010 Cancer Research UK. All rights reserved.",
keywords = "Distant relapse, Gene expression, Hypoxia, Meta-analysis",
author = "Buffa, \{F. M.\} and A.L. Harris and West, \{C. M.\} and Crispin Miller",
year = "2010",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1038/sj.bjc.6605450",
language = "English",
volume = "103",
pages = "929",
journal = "British Journal of Cancer",
issn = "0007-0920",
publisher = "Springer Nature",
number = "6",
}