INVESTIGADORES
BALZARINI Monica Graciela
artículos
Título:
Appropriate Sample Size for Standardization Parameters Estimation Reduces Misdiagnoses of Molecular-Based Risk Predictors in Breast Cancer
Autor/es:
GONZÁLEZ MONTORO, A.; PRATO, L.; CASARES, F.; BALZARINI, M.; FERNÁNDEZ, E.
Revista:
MEDICAL SCIENCE MONITOR
Editorial:
INT SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: New York; Año: 2017 vol. 58 p. 111 - 118
ISSN:
1234-1010
Resumen:
Background:Accurate risk/outcome prediction, in which molecular signatures (MS) are playing an increasingly important role, is crucial for personalized therapy. Patients require an accurate diagnosis and an appropriate therapy as- signment as soon as they arrive at the clinic. However, most MS require gene-based standardization through parameters estimated from an available population sample. Thus, the estimation of gene standardization pa- rameters (SP) turns out to be crucial to avoid misdiagnoses. Although dependency on SP has been recognized, the effect of different sample sizes on estimation of and impact on therapy management has not been report- ed. Because this is key for clinical application, in the present study we evaluated the impact of SP on outcome prediction error due to sample size. For this, 2 well-known breast cancer (BC) subtype/risk predictors were used on real data under different recruitment scenarios.Material/Methods: The PAM50 and Gene70 MS were fed with standardized gene expression profiles using SP estimated from dif- ferent sample sizes to predict BC intrinsic subtypes and progression, respectively. Error sensitivity analysis was based on estimation of outcome prediction error rates against those obtained using SP estimated with all the patients in the cohort (our criterion standard). Seven BC cohorts including TCGA data (2014 subjects in total) were used.Results:We found that BC outcome prediction is very sensitive to the sample size used to estimate the MS standard- ization parameters. More than 20% of predicted classes can change when using small sample sizes to com- pute SP, and more than 20% of subjects can have their predicted outcome changed.Conclusions:Patients might receive inappropriate therapy if the SP are not carefully dealt with. A pilot study to provide SP that yield a stable prediction is necessary. A method to evaluate the sufficiency of the size of the available sam- ple for parameter estimation is proposed to guide prior pilot study development.