Identification of monotonically differentially expressed genes for non-small cell lung cancer

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Abstract

Background: Monotonically expressed genes (MEGs) are genes whose expression values increase or decrease monotonically as a disease advances or time proceeds. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a multistage progression process resulting from genetic sequences mutations, the identification of MEGs for NSCLC is important. Results: With the aid of a feature selection algorithm capable of identifying MEGs - the MFSelector method - two sets of potential MEGs were selected in this study: the MEGs across the different pathologic stages and the MEGs across the risk levels of death for the NSCLC patients at early stages. For the lung adenocarcinoma (AC) subtypes no statistically significant MEGs were identified across pathologic stages, however dozens of MEGs were identified across the risk levels of death. By contrast, for the squamous cell lung carcinoma (SCC) there were no statistically significant MEGs as either stage or risk level advanced. Conclusions: The pathologic stage of non-small cell lung cancer patients at early stages has no prognostic value, making the identification of prognostic gene signatures for them more meaningful and highly desirable.

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APA

Tian, S. (2019). Identification of monotonically differentially expressed genes for non-small cell lung cancer. BMC Bioinformatics, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-019-2775-8

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