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Series GSE281307 Query DataSets for GSE281307
Status Public on Nov 15, 2024
Title Multimodal Genome-wide Survey of Progressing and Non-progressing Breast Ductal Carcinoma In-Situ
Organism Homo sapiens
Experiment type Methylation profiling by genome tiling array
Summary Background: Ductal carcinoma in-situ (DCIS) is a pre-invasive form of invasive breast cancer (IBC). Due to improved breast cancer screening, it now accounts for ~25% of all breast cancers. While the treatment success rates are over 90%, this comes at the cost of considerable morbidity, considering that the majority of DCIS never become invasive and our understanding of the molecular changes occurring in DCIS that predispose to invasive disease is limited. The aim of this study is to characterize molecular changes that occur in DCIS, with the goal of improving DCIS risk stratification. Methods: We identified and obtained a total of 197 breast tissue samples from 5 institutions (93 DCIS progressors, 93 DCIS non-progressors, and 11 adjacent normal breast tissues) that had at least 10-year follow-up. We isolated DNA and RNA from archival tissue blocks and characterized genome-wide mRNA expression, DNA methylation, DNA copy number variation, and RNA splicing variation. Results: We obtained all four genomic data sets in 122 of the 197 samples. Our intrinsic expression subtype-stratified analyses identified multiple molecular differences both between DCIS subtypes and between DCIS and IBC. While there was heterogeneity in molecular signatures and outcomes within intrinsic subtypes, several gene sets that differed significantly between progressing and non-progressing DCIS were identified by Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. Conclusions: DCIS is a molecularly highly heterogenous disease with variable outcomes, and the molecular events determining DCIS disease progression remain poorly defined. Our genome-wide multi-omic survey documents DCIS-associated alterations and reveals molecular heterogeneity within the intrinsic DCIS subtypes. Further studies investigating intrinsic subtype-stratified characteristics and molecular signatures are needed to determine if these may be exploitable for risk assessment and mitigation of DCIS progression. The highly significant associations of specific gene sets with IBC progression revealed by our Gene Set Enrichment Analysis may lend themselves to the development of a prognostic molecular score, to be validated on independent DCIS cohorts.
 
Overall design 197 breast tissue samples from 5 institutions (93 DCIS progressors, 93 DCIS non-progressors, and 11 adjacent normal breast tissues) that had at least 10-year follow-up. No replicates.
 
Contributor(s) Debeljak M, Cho S, Downs BM, Considine M, Avin-McKelvey B, Wang Y, Perez PN, Grizzle WE, Hoadley KA, Lynch CF, Hernandez BY, van Diest PJ, Cozen W, Hamilton AS, Hawes D, Gabrielson E, Cimino-Mathews A, Florea LD, Cope LM, Umbricht CB
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Submission date Nov 07, 2024
Last update date Nov 15, 2024
Contact name Michael Considine
E-mail(s) [email protected]
Organization name Johns Hopkins University
Street address 550 North Broadway
City Baltimore
State/province Maryland
ZIP/Postal code 21205
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL13534 Illumina HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (HumanMethylation450_15017482)
Samples (196)
GSM8618301 Meth.Sample.196
GSM8618302 Meth.Sample.140
GSM8618303 Meth.Sample.139
Relations
BioProject PRJNA1183364

Download family Format
SOFT formatted family file(s) SOFTHelp
MINiML formatted family file(s) MINiMLHelp
Series Matrix File(s) TXTHelp

Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE281307_DCISmethData.txt.gz 1.0 Gb (ftp)(http) TXT
GSE281307_RAW.tar 1.7 Gb (http)(custom) TAR (of IDAT)

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