Mycosis fungoides shows concurrent deregulation of multiple genes involved in the TNF signaling pathway: an expression profile study

L Tracey, R Villuendas, AM Dotor, I Spiteri, P Ortiz… - Blood, 2003 - ashpublications.org
L Tracey, R Villuendas, AM Dotor, I Spiteri, P Ortiz, JF García, JLR Peralto, M Lawler…
Blood, 2003ashpublications.org
Mycosis fungoides (MF) is the most frequent type of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, whose
diagnosis and study is hampered by its morphologic similarity to inflammatory dermatoses
(ID) and the low proportion of tumoral cells, which often account for only 5% to 10% of the
total tissue cells. cDNA microarray studies using the CNIO OncoChip of 29 MF and 11 ID
cases revealed a signature of 27 genes implicated in the tumorigenesis of MF, including
tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)–dependent apoptosis regulators, STAT4, CD40L, and …
Abstract
Mycosis fungoides (MF) is the most frequent type of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, whose diagnosis and study is hampered by its morphologic similarity to inflammatory dermatoses (ID) and the low proportion of tumoral cells, which often account for only 5% to 10% of the total tissue cells. cDNA microarray studies using the CNIO OncoChip of 29 MF and 11 ID cases revealed a signature of 27 genes implicated in the tumorigenesis of MF, including tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)–dependent apoptosis regulators, STAT4, CD40L, and other oncogenes and apoptosis inhibitors. Subsequently a 6-gene prediction model was constructed that is capable of distinguishing MF and ID cases with unprecedented accuracy. This model correctly predicted the class of 97% of cases in a blind test validation using 24 MF patients with low clinical stages. Unsupervised hierarchic clustering has revealed 2 major subclasses of MF, one of which tends to include more aggressive-type MF cases including tumoral MF forms. Furthermore, signatures associated with abnormal immunophenotype (11 genes) and tumor stage disease (5 genes) were identified.
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