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International Symposium on Biopharmaceutical Statistics Special Issue II

Genomic Biomarkers for Depression: Feature-Specific and Joint Biomarkers

Pages 419-434 | Received 01 Nov 2008, Published online: 01 Jan 2012
 

Abstract

Recently, preclinical microarray experiments have become increasingly common laboratory tools to investigate the activity of thousands of genes simultaneously and their response to a certain treatment (Amaratunga and Cabrera 2004). In some experiments, in addition to the gene expressions, other responses are also available. In such situations, the primary question of interest is to identify whether or not the gene expressions can serve as biomarkers for the responses. In addition to gene expressions, metabolites are potential biomarkers for some responses as well. In the present study, we focus on the identification of genomic biomarkers, based on gene and metabolite expression for depression. One measure of the level of depression is the Hamilton Depression Scale (HDS or HAMD) which is a test measuring the severity of depressive symptoms in individuals. The data for this study are a result of a clinical trial in which both HAMD and gene/metabolites expression were measured. We use three modeling approaches commonly used in the surrogate marker validation theory to select and evaluate a set of genes and metabolites as possible biomarkers for depression, as measured by the HAMD score. In addition to gene and metabolite specific biomarkers, we use supervised principal components analysis and supervised partial least squares regression technique to construct a joint biomarker that uses information from all genes/metabolites in the array.

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