Extent, impact, and mitigation of batch effects in tumor biomarker studies using tissue microarrays

Author:

Stopsack Konrad H1ORCID,Tyekucheva Svitlana2,Wang Molin1,Gerke Travis A3,Vaselkiv J Bailey1ORCID,Penney Kathryn L.#1,Kantoff Philip W4,Finn Stephen P5,Fiorentino Michelangelo6,Loda Massimo7,Lotan Tamara L8,Parmigiani Giovanni2,Mucci Lorelei A1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

2. Department of Data Science, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

3. Department of Cancer Epidemiology, Moffitt Cancer Center

4. Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

5. Trinity College

6. Pathology Unit, Addarii Institute, University of Bologna

7. Department of Pathology, Weill Cornell Medical Center

8. Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University

Abstract

Tissue microarrays (TMAs) have been used in thousands of cancer biomarker studies. To what extent batch effects, measurement error in biomarker levels between slides, affects TMA-based studies has not been assessed systematically. We evaluated 20 protein biomarkers on 14 TMAs with prospectively collected tumor tissue from 1,448 primary prostate cancers. In half of the biomarkers, more than 10% of biomarker variance was attributable to between-TMA differences (range, 1-48%). We implemented different methods to mitigate batch effects (R package batchtma), tested in plasmode simulation. Biomarker levels were more similar between mitigation approaches compared to uncorrected values. For some biomarkers, associations with clinical features changed substantially after addressing batch effects. Batch effects and resulting bias are not an error of an individual study but an inherent feature of TMA-based protein biomarker studies. They always need to be considered during study design and addressed analytically in studies using more than one TMA.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

DOD Prostate Cancer Research Program

Prostate Cancer Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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