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The Stroma Liquid Biopsy Panel Contains a Stromal-Epithelial Gene Signature Ratio That Is Associated with the Histologic Tumor-Stroma Ratio and Predicts Survival in Colon Cancer.

Cor J RavensbergenMatthew KurucMeaghan PolackStijn CrobachHein PutterAndré B P van KuilenburgDevjit RoyRob A E M TollenaarWilma E Mesker
Published in: Cancers (2021)
Liquid biopsy has emerged as a novel approach to tumor characterization, offering advantages in sample accessibility and tissue heterogeneity. However, as mutational analysis predominates, the tumor microenvironment has largely remained unacknowledged in liquid biopsy research. The current work provides an explorative transcriptomic characterization of the Stroma Liquid Biopsy TM (SLB) proteomics panel in colon carcinoma by integrating single-cell and bulk transcriptomics data from publicly available repositories. Expression of SLB genes was significantly enriched in tumors with high histologic stromal content in comparison to tumors with low stromal content (median enrichment score 0.308 vs. 0.222, p = 0.036). In addition, we identified stromal-specific and epithelial-specific expression of the SLB genes, that was subsequently integrated into a gene signature ratio. The stromal-epithelial signature ratio was found to have prognostic significance in a discovery cohort of 359 colon adenocarcinoma patients (OS HR 2.581, 95%CI 1.567-4.251, p < 0.001) and a validation cohort of 229 patients (OS HR 2.590, 95%CI 1.659-4.043, p < 0.001). The framework described here provides transcriptomic evidence for the prognostic significance of the SLB panel constituents in colon carcinoma. Plasma protein levels of the SLB panel may reflect histologic intratumoral stromal content, a poor prognostic tumor characteristic, and hence provide valuable prognostic information in liquid biopsy.
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