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Comparison of approaches to transcriptomic analysis in multi-sampled tumors
Author(s) -
Anson T. Ku,
Scott Wilkinson,
Adam G. Sowalsky
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
briefings in bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.204
H-Index - 113
eISSN - 1477-4054
pISSN - 1467-5463
DOI - 10.1093/bib/bbab337
Subject(s) - prostate cancer , transcriptome , sampling (signal processing) , variance (accounting) , computational biology , statistical power , sample size determination , linear model , analysis of variance , phenotype , gene , computer science , cancer , biology , gene expression , statistics , machine learning , genetics , mathematics , accounting , filter (signal processing) , business , computer vision
Intratumoral heterogeneity is a well-documented feature of human cancers and is associated with outcome and treatment resistance. However, a heterogeneous tumor transcriptome contributes an unknown level of variability to analyses of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) that may contribute to phenotypes of interest, including treatment response. Although current clinical practice and the vast majority of research studies use a single sample from each patient, decreasing costs of sequencing technologies and computing power have made repeated-measures analyses increasingly economical. Repeatedly sampling the same tumor increases the statistical power of DEG analysis, which is indispensable toward downstream analysis and also increases one’s understanding of within-tumor variance, which may affect conclusions. Here, we compared five different methods for analyzing gene expression profiles derived from repeated sampling of human prostate tumors in two separate cohorts of patients. We also benchmarked the sensitivity of generalized linear models to linear mixed models for identifying DEGs contributing to relevant prostate cancer pathways based on a ground-truth model.

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