Improving the quality of biomarker discovery research: the right samples and enough of them

Margaret S Pepe, Christopher I Li, Ziding Feng, Margaret S Pepe, Christopher I Li, Ziding Feng

Abstract

Background: Biomarker discovery research has yielded few biomarkers that validate for clinical use. A contributing factor may be poor study designs.

Methods: The goal in discovery research is to identify a subset of potentially useful markers from a large set of candidates assayed on case and control samples. We recommend the PRoBE design for selecting samples. We propose sample size calculations that require specifying: (i) a definition for biomarker performance; (ii) the proportion of useful markers the study should identify (Discovery Power); and (iii) the tolerable number of useless markers amongst those identified (False Leads Expected, FLE).

Results: We apply the methodology to a study of 9,000 candidate biomarkers for risk of colon cancer recurrence where a useful biomarker has positive predictive value ≥ 30%. We find that 40 patients with recurrence and 160 without recurrence suffice to filter out 98% of useless markers (2% FLE) while identifying 95% of useful biomarkers (95% Discovery Power). Alternative methods for sample size calculation required more assumptions.

Conclusions: Biomarker discovery research should utilize quality biospecimen repositories and include sample sizes that enable markers meeting prespecified performance characteristics for well-defined clinical applications to be identified.

Impact: The scientific rigor of discovery research should be improved.

©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Key steps for choosing samples in a biomarker discovery study.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Key steps for choosing samples in discovering biomarkers for predicting recurrence in stage 1 colon cancer patients.

Source: PubMed

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