Questions about Disease Progression Analysis
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li lilingdu ▴ 450
@li-lilingdu-1884
Last seen 5.9 years ago
Dear all, I am using cDNA two-channel array to study gene profiling of 5 different stages of thyroid disease. Was there any Bioconductor package to perform such disease progression analysis? I have found packages such as "maSigPro<http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" masigpro.html=""> " "Mfuzz <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" mfuzz.html="">" and" timecourse <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" timecourse.html="">" to perform Microarray Time Course Data analysis, can these methods be used to carry out disease progression data analysis? Any suggestions and helps would be greatly appreciated! --- LiGang [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Microarray Microarray • 1.1k views
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@sean-davis-490
Last seen 3 months ago
United States
On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 5:00 AM, LiGang <luzifer.li at="" gmail.com=""> wrote: > Dear all, > > > > I am using cDNA two-channel array to study gene profiling of 5 different > stages of thyroid disease. Was there any Bioconductor package to perform > such disease progression analysis? > > > > I have found packages such as > "maSigPro<http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" masigpro.ht="" ml=""> > " "Mfuzz <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" mfuzz.html="">" and" > timecourse <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" timecourse.html="">" > to perform Microarray Time Course Data analysis, can these methods be used > to carry out disease progression data analysis? Hi, LiGang. There is a real temptation to think of disease stage as a process that occurs in an ordered fashion. That is, stage I disease is just early enough that it has not progressed to stage II, etc. I think that there is plenty of evidence that this not always (or even often) the case, so I would be hesitant to treat the stages of thyroid disease as a disease progression. As for time course analysis, it usually examines the behavior of genes in the same sample(s) over time; you will likely not have the same person who has multiple stages of thyroid disease, so I am not sure that these methods will be applicable in your situation, anyway. Do you have clinical followup data? Other clinical covariates? And how many samples do you have in your dataset? All of these are important questions that can guide the hypotheses that you might want to test. Hope that helps. Sean
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li lilingdu ▴ 450
@li-lilingdu-1884
Last seen 5.9 years ago
Sean Davis <sdavis2 at="" ...=""> writes: > > On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 5:00 AM, LiGang <luzifer.li at="" ...=""> wrote: > > Dear all, > > > > > > > > I am using cDNA two-channel array to study gene profiling of 5 different > > stages of thyroid disease. Was there any Bioconductor package to perform > > such disease progression analysis? > > > > > > > > I have found packages such as > > "maSigPro<http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" masigpro.="" html=""> > > " "Mfuzz <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" mfuzz.html="">" and" > > timecourse <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" timecourse.html="">" > > to perform Microarray Time Course Data analysis, can these methods be used > > to carry out disease progression data analysis? > > Hi, LiGang. There is a real temptation to think of disease stage as a > process that occurs in an ordered fashion. That is, stage I disease > is just early enough that it has not progressed to stage II, etc. I > think that there is plenty of evidence that this not always (or even > often) the case, so I would be hesitant to treat the stages of thyroid > disease as a disease progression. > > As for time course analysis, it usually examines the behavior of genes > in the same sample(s) over time; you will likely not have the same > person who has multiple stages of thyroid disease, so I am not sure > that these methods will be applicable in your situation, anyway. > > Do you have clinical followup data? Other clinical covariates? And > how many samples do you have in your dataset? All of these are > important questions that can guide the hypotheses that you might want > to test. > > Hope that helps. > > Sean > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at ... > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor > Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor > > Dear Sean, Thanks for your reply! In fact, there are no clinical parameters except the qualitative stage information. Experiment details are listed below: Chip Stage sample ================================ Chip_1 Stage 1 mouse_1_thyroid Chip_2 Stage 1 mouse_2_thyroid Chip_3 Stage 1 mouse_3_thyroid Chip_4 Stage 1 mouse_4_thyroid ---------------------------------------------------- Chip_5 Stage 2 mouse_5_thyroid Chip_6 Stage 2 mouse_6_thyroid Chip_7 Stage 2 mouse_7_thyroid Chip_8 Stage 2 mouse_8_thyroid ---------------------------------------------------- Chip_9 Stage 3 mouse_9_thyroid Chip_10 Stage 3 mouse_10_thyroid Chip_11 Stage 3 mouse_11_thyroid Chip_12 Stage 3 mouse_12_thyroid ---------------------------------------------------- Chip_13 Stage 4 mouse_13_thyroid Chip_14 Stage 4 mouse_14_thyroid Chip_15 Stage 4 mouse_15_thyroid Chip_16 Stage 4 mouse_16_thyroid ---------------------------------------------------- Chip_17 Stage 5 mouse_17_thyroid Chip_18 Stage 5 mouse_18_thyroid Chip_19 Stage 5 mouse_19_thyroid Chip_20 Stage 5 mouse_20_thyroid ================================ and all 20 hybridizations use the same common reference sample (pooled samples of normal tissues from the above 20 mice). My aim is to identify genes that are up-regulated or down-regulated as thyroid disease progresses and even whether there exist genes which have a specific trend. Is it rational to: 1) perform pairwise comparisons 2) Select the Union set of all genes whose expression level changed between any arbitrary pairwise comparisons. 3) Do cluster analysis to see the trends. --- LiGang
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On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 10:08 PM, LiGang <luzifer.li at="" gmail.com=""> wrote: > Sean Davis <sdavis2 at="" ...=""> writes: > >> >> On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 5:00 AM, LiGang <luzifer.li at="" ...=""> wrote: >> > Dear all, >> > >> > >> > >> > I am using cDNA two-channel array to study gene profiling of 5 different >> > stages of thyroid disease. Was there any Bioconductor package to perform >> > such disease progression analysis? >> > >> > >> > >> > I have found packages such as >> > "maSigPro<http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" masigpro="" .html=""> >> > " "Mfuzz <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" mfuzz.html="">" and" >> > timecourse > <http: bioconductor.org="" packages="" 2.2="" bioc="" html="" timecourse.html="">" >> > to perform Microarray Time Course Data analysis, can these methods be used >> > to carry out disease progression data analysis? >> >> Hi, LiGang. There is a real temptation to think of disease stage as a >> process that occurs in an ordered fashion. That is, stage I disease >> is just early enough that it has not progressed to stage II, etc. I >> think that there is plenty of evidence that this not always (or even >> often) the case, so I would be hesitant to treat the stages of thyroid >> disease as a disease progression. >> >> As for time course analysis, it usually examines the behavior of genes >> in the same sample(s) over time; you will likely not have the same >> person who has multiple stages of thyroid disease, so I am not sure >> that these methods will be applicable in your situation, anyway. >> >> Do you have clinical followup data? Other clinical covariates? And >> how many samples do you have in your dataset? All of these are >> important questions that can guide the hypotheses that you might want >> to test. >> >> Hope that helps. >> >> Sean >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Bioconductor mailing list >> Bioconductor at ... >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor >> Search the archives: > http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor >> >> > > Dear Sean, > > Thanks for your reply! > > In fact, there are no clinical parameters except the qualitative stage > information. > > Experiment details are listed below: > > Chip Stage sample > ================================ > Chip_1 Stage 1 mouse_1_thyroid > Chip_2 Stage 1 mouse_2_thyroid > Chip_3 Stage 1 mouse_3_thyroid > Chip_4 Stage 1 mouse_4_thyroid > ---------------------------------------------------- > Chip_5 Stage 2 mouse_5_thyroid > Chip_6 Stage 2 mouse_6_thyroid > Chip_7 Stage 2 mouse_7_thyroid > Chip_8 Stage 2 mouse_8_thyroid > ---------------------------------------------------- > Chip_9 Stage 3 mouse_9_thyroid > Chip_10 Stage 3 mouse_10_thyroid > Chip_11 Stage 3 mouse_11_thyroid > Chip_12 Stage 3 mouse_12_thyroid > ---------------------------------------------------- > Chip_13 Stage 4 mouse_13_thyroid > Chip_14 Stage 4 mouse_14_thyroid > Chip_15 Stage 4 mouse_15_thyroid > Chip_16 Stage 4 mouse_16_thyroid > ---------------------------------------------------- > Chip_17 Stage 5 mouse_17_thyroid > Chip_18 Stage 5 mouse_18_thyroid > Chip_19 Stage 5 mouse_19_thyroid > Chip_20 Stage 5 mouse_20_thyroid > ================================ > > and all 20 hybridizations use the same common reference sample (pooled samples > of normal tissues from the above 20 mice). > > My aim is to identify genes that are up-regulated or down-regulated as thyroid > disease progresses and even whether there exist genes which have a specific > trend. > > Is it rational to: > > 1) perform pairwise comparisons > 2) Select the Union set of all genes whose expression level changed > between any arbitrary pairwise comparisons. > 3) Do cluster analysis to see the trends. See section 8.6 of the limma user guide on multiple groups as an example of how an analysis of multiple groups could be done. Sean
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