Investigator

Corrine A. Nief

Intern - Variant Team · Ambry Genetics Corp, Computational Biology

CANCorrine A. Nief
Papers(1)
Endometrioid Endometr…
Collaborators(8)
Elizabeth KiddPhoebe M HammerVivek CharuAihui WangAmina TanweerAndrew J. GentlesBabak LitkouhiBrooke E. Howitt
Institutions(1)
Stanford University

Papers

Endometrioid Endometrial RNA Index Predicts Recurrence in Stage I Patients

Abstract Purpose: Risk prediction with genomic and transcriptomic data has the potential to improve patient outcomes by enabling clinicians to identify patients requiring adjuvant treatment approaches, while sparing low-risk patients from unnecessary interventions. Endometrioid endometrial carcinoma (EEC) is the most common cancer in women in developed countries, and rates of endometrial cancer are increasing. Experimental Design: We collected a 105-patient case-control cohort of stage I EEC comprising 45 patients who experienced recurrence less than 6 years after excision, and 60 Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique grade-matched controls without recurrence. We first utilized two RNA-based, previously validated machine learning approaches, namely, EcoTyper and Complexity Index in Sarcoma (CINSARC). We developed Endometrioid Endometrial RNA Index (EERI), which uses RNA expression data from 46 genes to generate a personalized risk score for each patient. EERI was trained on our 105-patient cohort and tested on a publicly available cohort of 263 patients with stage I EEC. Results: EERI was able to predict recurrences with 94% accuracy in the training set and 81% accuracy in the test set. In the test set, patients assigned as EERI high-risk were significantly more likely to experience recurrence (30%) than the EERI low-risk group (1%) with a hazard ratio of 9.9 (95% CI, 4.1–23.8; P < 0.001). Conclusions: Tumors with high-risk genetic features may require additional treatment or closer monitoring and are not readily identified using traditional clinicopathologic and molecular features. EERI performs with high sensitivity and modest specificity, which may benefit from further optimization and validation in larger independent cohorts.

37Works
1Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

2016–

Intern - Variant Team

Ambry Genetics Corp · Computational Biology

2015–

Summer Intern

National Institutes of Health · NHLBI

2014–

SULI Summer Intern

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Education

2021

M.D.

Stanford University School of Medicine

2021

Ph.D.

Duke University · Biomedical Engineering

2016

B.S.

Baylor University · General Engineering

Country

US

Keywords
Tumor AblationOncologyGynecologic OncologyBiomedical EngineeringBioinformatics