Airway epithelial gene expression in the diagnostic evaluation of smokers with suspect lung cancer

Author:  ["Avrum Spira","Jennifer E Beane","Vishal Shah","Katrina Steiling","Gang Liu","Frank Schembri","Sean Gilman","Yves-Martine Dumas","Paul Calner","Paola Sebastiani","Sriram Sridhar","John Beamis","Carla Lamb","Timothy Anderson","Norman Gerry","Joseph Keane","Marc E Lenburg","Jerome S Brody"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

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Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Lung cancer is the leading cause of death from cancer in the US and the world1. The high mortality rate (80–85% within 5 years) results, in part, from a lack of effective tools to diagnose the disease at an early stage2,3,4. Given that cigarette smoke creates a field of injury throughout the airway5,6,7,8,9,10,11, we sought to determine if gene expression in histologically normal large-airway epithelial cells obtained at bronchoscopy from smokers with suspicion of lung cancer could be used as a lung cancer biomarker. Using a training set (n = 77) and gene-expression profiles from Affymetrix HG-U133A microarrays, we identified an 80-gene biomarker that distinguishes smokers with and without lung cancer. We tested the biomarker on an independent test set (n = 52), with an accuracy of 83% (80% sensitive, 84% specific), and on an additional validation set independently obtained from five medical centers (n = 35). Our biomarker had ∼90% sensitivity for stage 1 cancer across all subjects. Combining cytopathology of lower airway cells obtained at bronchoscopy with the biomarker yielded 95% sensitivity and a 95% negative predictive value. These findings indicate that gene expression in cytologically normal large-airway epithelial cells can serve as a lung cancer biomarker, potentially owing to a cancer-specific airway-wide response to cigarette smoke.

Cite this article

Spira, A., Beane, J., Shah, V. et al. Airway epithelial gene expression in the diagnostic evaluation of smokers with suspect lung cancer. Nat Med 13, 361–366 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1556

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