BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer (CC) remains a leading cause of gynaecological cancer-related mortality world
wide and constitutes the third most common malignancy in women. The RAIDs consortium (http://www.
raids-fp7.eu/) conducted a prospective European study [BioRAIDs (NCT02428842)] with the objective to
stratify CC patients for innovative treatments. A “metagene” of genomic markers in the PI3K pathway and
epigenetic regulators had been previously associated with poor outcome [2].
METHODS: To detect new, more specific, targets for treatment of patients who resist standard chemo-radiation,
a high-dimensional Cox model was applied to define dominant molecular variants, copy number variations,
and reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA).
FINDINGS: Survival analysis on 89 patients with all omics data available, suggested loss-of-function (LOF) or
activating molecular alterations in nine genes to be candidate biomarkers for worse prognosis in patients
treated by chemo-radiation while LOF of ATRX, MED13 as well as CASP8 were associated with better prognosis. When protein expression data by RPPA were factored in, the supposedly low molecula