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- Title
Non‐invasive metastasis prognosis from plasma metabolites in stage II colorectal cancer patients: The DACHS study.
- Authors
Zaimenko, Inna; Jaeger, Carsten; Brenner, Hermann; Chang‐Claude, Jenny; Hoffmeister, Michael; Grötzinger, Carsten; Detjen, Katharina; Burock, Susen; Schmitt, Clemens A.; Stein, Ulrike; Lisec, Jan
- Abstract
Metastasis is the main cause of death from colorectal cancer (CRC). About 20% of stage II CRC patients develop metastasis during the course of disease. We performed metabolic profiling of plasma samples from non‐metastasized and metachronously metastasized stage II CRC patients to assess the potential of plasma metabolites to serve as biomarkers for stratification of stage II CRC patients according to metastasis risk. We compared the metabolic profiles of plasma samples prospectively obtained prior to metastasis formation from non‐metastasized vs. metachronously metastasized stage II CRC patients of the German population‐based case–control multicenter DACHS study retrospectively. Plasma samples were analyzed from stage II CRC patients for whom follow‐up data including the information on metachronous metastasis were available. To identify metabolites distinguishing non‐metastasized from metachronously metastasized stage II CRC patients robust supervised classifications using decision trees and support vector machines were performed and verified by 10‐fold cross‐validation, by nested cross‐validation and by traditional validation using training and test sets. We found that metabolic profiles distinguish non‐metastasized from metachronously metastasized stage II CRC patients. Classification models from decision trees and support vector machines with 10‐fold cross‐validation gave average accuracy of 0.75 (sensitivity 0.79, specificity 0.7) and 0.82 (sensitivity 0.85, specificity 0.77), respectively, correctly predicting metachronous metastasis in stage II CRC patients. Taken together, plasma metabolic profiles distinguished non‐metastasized and metachronously metastasized stage II CRC patients. The classification models consisting of few metabolites stratify non‐invasively stage II CRC patients according to their risk for metachronous metastasis. What's new? Metastasis is the leading cause of death from colorectal cancer (CRC). New predictive biomarkers are urgently needed, as 25‐50% of patients with stage I‐III CRC will develop distant metastases after surgery. Here, the authors analyzed plasma from stage‐II CRC patients prior to any metastasis, and asked whether plasma metabolites differed between those patients who later developed metastases and those who did not. The answer was 'yes.' The metabolic‐profiling models developed in this study were able to correctly predict later metastases in up to 82% of patients.
- Publication
International Journal of Cancer, 2019, Vol 145, Issue 1, p221
- ISSN
0020-7136
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ijc.32076