A statistical framework for expression-based molecular classification in cancer
Genome-wide measurement of gene expression is a promising approach to the identification of subclasses of cancer that are currently not differentiable, but potentially biologically heterogeneous. This type of molecular classification gives hope for highly individualized and more effective prognosis and treatment of cancer. Statistically, the analysis of gene expression data from unclassified tumours is a complex hypothesis-generating activity, involving data exploration, modelling and expert elicitation. We propose a modelling framework that can be used to inform and organize the development of exploratory tools for classification. Our framework uses latent categories to provide both a statistical definition of differential expression and a precise, experiment-independent, definition of a molecular profile. It also generates natural similarity measures for traditional clustering and gives probabilistic statements about the assignment of tumours to molecular profiles. Copyright 2002 Royal Statistical Society.
Year of publication: |
2002
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Authors: | Parmigiani, Giovanni ; Garrett, Elizabeth S. ; Anbazhagan, Ramaswamy ; Gabrielson, Edward |
Published in: |
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B. - Royal Statistical Society - RSS, ISSN 1369-7412. - Vol. 64.2002, 4, p. 717-736
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Publisher: |
Royal Statistical Society - RSS |
Saved in:
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