Hypoxia Predicts Poor Prognosis in Neuroblastoma Patients and Associates with Biological Mechanisms Involved in Telomerase Activation and Tumor Microenvironment Reprogramming
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
The biological and clinical heterogeneity of neuroblastoma (NB) demands novel biomarkers
and therapeutic targets in order to drive the most appropriate treatment for each patient. Hypoxia is
a condition of low-oxygen tension occurring in poorly vascularized tumor tissues. In this
study, we aimed to assess the role of hypoxia in the pathogenesis of NB and at developing a
new clinically relevant hypoxia-based predictor of outcome. We analyzed the gene expression
profiles of 1882 untreated NB primary tumors collected at diagnosis and belonging to four
existing data sets. Analyses took advantage of machine learning methods. We identified NB-hop,
a seven-gene hypoxia biomarker, as a predictor of NB patient prognosis, which is able to discriminate
between two populations of patients with unfavorable or favorable outcome on a molecular
basis. NB-hop retained its prognostic value in a multivariate model adjusted for established
risk factors and was able to additionally stratify clinically relevant groups of patients. Tumors with
an unfavorable NB-hop expression showed a significant association with telomerase activation and a
hypoxic, immunosuppressive, poorly differentiated, and apoptosis-resistant tumor microenvironment.
NB-hop defines a new population of NB patients with hypoxic tumors and unfavorable prognosis
and it represents a critical factor for the stratification and treatment of NB patients.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
neuroblastoma; hypoxia; prognosis; cell immortalization; therapeutic target
List of contributors:
Muselli, Marco
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