Journal article
Stem Cell-Like Gene Expression in Ovarian Cancer Predicts Type II Subtype and Prognosis
M Schwede, D Spentzos, S Bentink, O Hofmann, B Haibe-Kains, D Harrington, J Quackenbush, AC Culhane
Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2013
Abstract
Although ovarian cancer is often initially chemotherapy-sensitive, the vast majority of tumors eventually relapse and patients die of increasingly aggressive disease. Cancer stem cells are believed to have properties that allow them to survive therapy and may drive recurrent tumor growth. Cancer stem cells or cancer-initiating cells are a rare cell population and difficult to isolate experimentally. Genes that are expressed by stem cells may characterize a subset of less differentiated tumors and aid in prognostic classification of ovarian cancer. The purpose of this study was the genomic identification and characterization of a subtype of ovarian cancer that has stem cell-like gene expressi..
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Awarded by National Cancer Institute
Funding Acknowledgements
Funding for this work was provided by the National Institutes of Health 1U19CA148065 (J.Q., B.H.K.), Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Women's Cancers Program (awarded to A.C.C; M.S, A.C.C.) and the Claudia Adams Barr foundation (J.Q. and A.C.C.). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.