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Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival

BACKGROUND: We have engaged in an international program designated the Bank On A Cure, which has established DNA banks from multiple cooperative and institutional clinical trials, and a platform for examining the association of genetic variations with disease risk and outcomes in multiple myeloma. W...

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Autores principales: Van Ness, Brian, Ramos, Christine, Haznadar, Majda, Hoering, Antje, Haessler, Jeff, Crowley, John, Jacobus, Susanna, Oken, Martin, Rajkumar, Vincent, Greipp, Philip, Barlogie, Bart, Durie, Brian, Katz, Michael, Atluri, Gowtham, Fang, Gang, Gupta, Rohit, Steinbach, Michael, Kumar, Vipin, Mushlin, Richard, Johnson, David, Morgan, Gareth
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2553089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18778477
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-6-26
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author Van Ness, Brian
Ramos, Christine
Haznadar, Majda
Hoering, Antje
Haessler, Jeff
Crowley, John
Jacobus, Susanna
Oken, Martin
Rajkumar, Vincent
Greipp, Philip
Barlogie, Bart
Durie, Brian
Katz, Michael
Atluri, Gowtham
Fang, Gang
Gupta, Rohit
Steinbach, Michael
Kumar, Vipin
Mushlin, Richard
Johnson, David
Morgan, Gareth
author_facet Van Ness, Brian
Ramos, Christine
Haznadar, Majda
Hoering, Antje
Haessler, Jeff
Crowley, John
Jacobus, Susanna
Oken, Martin
Rajkumar, Vincent
Greipp, Philip
Barlogie, Bart
Durie, Brian
Katz, Michael
Atluri, Gowtham
Fang, Gang
Gupta, Rohit
Steinbach, Michael
Kumar, Vipin
Mushlin, Richard
Johnson, David
Morgan, Gareth
author_sort Van Ness, Brian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We have engaged in an international program designated the Bank On A Cure, which has established DNA banks from multiple cooperative and institutional clinical trials, and a platform for examining the association of genetic variations with disease risk and outcomes in multiple myeloma. We describe the development and content of a novel custom SNP panel that contains 3404 SNPs in 983 genes, representing cellular functions and pathways that may influence disease severity at diagnosis, toxicity, progression or other treatment outcomes. A systematic search of national databases was used to identify non-synonymous coding SNPs and SNPs within transcriptional regulatory regions. To explore SNP associations with PFS we compared SNP profiles of short term (less than 1 year, n = 70) versus long term progression-free survivors (greater than 3 years, n = 73) in two phase III clinical trials. RESULTS: Quality controls were established, demonstrating an accurate and robust screening panel for genetic variations, and some initial racial comparisons of allelic variation were done. A variety of analytical approaches, including machine learning tools for data mining and recursive partitioning analyses, demonstrated predictive value of the SNP panel in survival. While the entire SNP panel showed genotype predictive association with PFS, some SNP subsets were identified within drug response, cellular signaling and cell cycle genes. CONCLUSION: A targeted gene approach was undertaken to develop an SNP panel that can test for associations with clinical outcomes in myeloma. The initial analysis provided some predictive power, demonstrating that genetic variations in the myeloma patient population may influence PFS.
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spelling pubmed-25530892008-09-25 Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival Van Ness, Brian Ramos, Christine Haznadar, Majda Hoering, Antje Haessler, Jeff Crowley, John Jacobus, Susanna Oken, Martin Rajkumar, Vincent Greipp, Philip Barlogie, Bart Durie, Brian Katz, Michael Atluri, Gowtham Fang, Gang Gupta, Rohit Steinbach, Michael Kumar, Vipin Mushlin, Richard Johnson, David Morgan, Gareth BMC Med Research Article BACKGROUND: We have engaged in an international program designated the Bank On A Cure, which has established DNA banks from multiple cooperative and institutional clinical trials, and a platform for examining the association of genetic variations with disease risk and outcomes in multiple myeloma. We describe the development and content of a novel custom SNP panel that contains 3404 SNPs in 983 genes, representing cellular functions and pathways that may influence disease severity at diagnosis, toxicity, progression or other treatment outcomes. A systematic search of national databases was used to identify non-synonymous coding SNPs and SNPs within transcriptional regulatory regions. To explore SNP associations with PFS we compared SNP profiles of short term (less than 1 year, n = 70) versus long term progression-free survivors (greater than 3 years, n = 73) in two phase III clinical trials. RESULTS: Quality controls were established, demonstrating an accurate and robust screening panel for genetic variations, and some initial racial comparisons of allelic variation were done. A variety of analytical approaches, including machine learning tools for data mining and recursive partitioning analyses, demonstrated predictive value of the SNP panel in survival. While the entire SNP panel showed genotype predictive association with PFS, some SNP subsets were identified within drug response, cellular signaling and cell cycle genes. CONCLUSION: A targeted gene approach was undertaken to develop an SNP panel that can test for associations with clinical outcomes in myeloma. The initial analysis provided some predictive power, demonstrating that genetic variations in the myeloma patient population may influence PFS. BioMed Central 2008-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2553089/ /pubmed/18778477 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-6-26 Text en Copyright © 2008 Van Ness et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Van Ness, Brian
Ramos, Christine
Haznadar, Majda
Hoering, Antje
Haessler, Jeff
Crowley, John
Jacobus, Susanna
Oken, Martin
Rajkumar, Vincent
Greipp, Philip
Barlogie, Bart
Durie, Brian
Katz, Michael
Atluri, Gowtham
Fang, Gang
Gupta, Rohit
Steinbach, Michael
Kumar, Vipin
Mushlin, Richard
Johnson, David
Morgan, Gareth
Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title_full Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title_fullStr Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title_full_unstemmed Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title_short Genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the Bank On A Cure SNP Panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
title_sort genomic variation in myeloma: design, content, and initial application of the bank on a cure snp panel to detect associations with progression-free survival
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2553089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18778477
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-6-26
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