Publication | Open Access
Molecular Subtypes in Head and Neck Cancer Exhibit Distinct Patterns of Chromosomal Gain and Loss of Canonical Cancer Genes
330
Citations
42
References
2013
Year
EngineeringGeneticsCanonical Cancer GenesPathologyChromosomal GainHpv Infection StatusDifferential UtilizationCancer-associated VirusTumor HeterogeneityNeck OncologyMolecular DiagnosticsCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentMedicineHuman Papilloma VirusCancer GeneticsLung CancerTumor MicroenvironmentChromatinCervical CancerMolecular SubtypesCancer GenomicsHead And Neck CancerSystems BiologyOncology
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a frequently fatal heterogeneous disease. Beyond the role of human papilloma virus (HPV), no validated molecular characterization of the disease has been established. Using an integrated genomic analysis and validation methodology we confirm four molecular classes of HNSCC (basal, mesenchymal, atypical, and classical) consistent with signatures established for squamous carcinoma of the lung, including deregulation of the KEAP1/NFE2L2 oxidative stress pathway, differential utilization of the lineage markers SOX2 and TP63, and preference for the oncogenes PIK3CA and EGFR. For potential clinical use the signatures are complimentary to classification by HPV infection status as well as the putative high risk marker CCND1 copy number gain. A molecular etiology for the subtypes is suggested by statistically significant chromosomal gains and losses and differential cell of origin expression patterns. Model systems representative of each of the four subtypes are also presented.
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