Glioblastoma: imaging genomic mapping reveals sex-specific oncogenic associations of cell death

RR Colen, J Wang, SK Singh, DA Gutman, PO Zinn - Radiology, 2015 - pubs.rsna.org
Radiology, 2015pubs.rsna.org
Purpose To identify the molecular profiles of cell death as defined by necrosis volumes at
magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and uncover sex-specific molecular signatures
potentially driving oncogenesis and cell death in glioblastoma (GBM). Materials and
Methods This retrospective study was HIPAA compliant and had institutional review board
approval, with waiver of the need to obtain informed consent. The molecular profiles for 99
patients (30 female patients, 69 male patients) were identified from the Cancer Genome …
Purpose
To identify the molecular profiles of cell death as defined by necrosis volumes at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and uncover sex-specific molecular signatures potentially driving oncogenesis and cell death in glioblastoma (GBM).
Materials and Methods
This retrospective study was HIPAA compliant and had institutional review board approval, with waiver of the need to obtain informed consent. The molecular profiles for 99 patients (30 female patients, 69 male patients) were identified from the Cancer Genome Atlas, and quantitative MR imaging data were obtained from the Cancer Imaging Archive. Volumes of necrosis at MR imaging were extracted. Differential gene expression profiles were obtained in those patients (including male and female patients separately) with high versus low MR imaging volumes of tumor necrosis. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis was used for messenger RNA–microRNA interaction analysis. A histopathologic data set (n = 368; 144 female patients, 224 male patients) was used to validate the MR imaging findings by assessing the amount of cell death. A connectivity map was used to identify therapeutic agents potentially targeting sex-specific cell death in GBM.
Results
Female patients showed significantly lower volumes of necrosis at MR imaging than male patients (6821 vs 11 050 mm3, P = .03). Female patients, unlike male patients, with high volumes of necrosis at imaging had significantly shorter survival (6.5 vs 14.5 months, P = .01). Transcription factor analysis suggested that cell death in female patients with GBM is associated with MYC, while that in male patients is associated with TP53 activity. Additionally, a group of therapeutic agents that can potentially be tested to target cell death in a sex-specific manner was identified.
Conclusion
The results of this study suggest that cell death in GBM may be driven by sex-specific molecular pathways.
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Radiological Society of North America