RNA Expression Signatures of Intracranial Aneurysm Growth Trajectory Identified in Circulating Whole Blood

4Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

After detection, identifying which intracranial aneurysms (IAs) will rupture is imperative. We hypothesized that RNA expression in circulating blood reflects IA growth rate as a surrogate of instability and rupture risk. To this end, we performed RNA sequencing on 66 blood samples from IA patients, for which we also calculated the predicted aneurysm trajectory (PAT), a metric quantifying an IA’s future growth rate. We dichotomized dataset using the median PAT score into IAs that were either more stable and more likely to grow quickly. The dataset was then randomly divided into training (n = 46) and testing cohorts (n = 20). In training, differentially expressed protein-coding genes were identified as those with expression (TPM > 0.5) in at least 50% of the samples, a q-value < 0.05 (based on modified F-statistics with Benjamini-Hochberg correction), and an absolute fold-change ≥ 1.5. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis was used to construct networks of gene associations and to perform ontology term enrichment analysis. The MATLAB Classification Learner was then employed to assess modeling capability of the differentially expressed genes, using a 5-fold cross validation in training. Finally, the model was applied to the withheld, independent testing cohort (n = 20) to assess its predictive ability. In all, we examined transcriptomes of 66 IA patients, of which 33 IAs were “growing” (PAT ≥ 4.6) and 33 were more “stable”. After dividing dataset into training and testing, we identified 39 genes in training as differentially expressed (11 with decreased expression in “growing” and 28 with increased expression). Model genes largely reflected organismal injury and abnormalities and cell to cell signaling and interaction. Preliminary modeling using a subspace discriminant ensemble model achieved a training AUC of 0.85 and a testing AUC of 0.86. In conclusion, transcriptomic expression in circulating blood indeed can distinguish “growing” and “stable” IA cases. The predictive model constructed from these differentially expressed genes could be used to assess IA stability and rupture potential.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Poppenberg, K. E., Chien, A., Santo, B. A., Baig, A. A., Monteiro, A., Dmytriw, A. A., … Tutino, V. M. (2023). RNA Expression Signatures of Intracranial Aneurysm Growth Trajectory Identified in Circulating Whole Blood. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13020266

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free