Abstract

Objective Dysregulation of cell cycle progression (CCP) is one of the hallmarks of cancer. Here, our study is aimed at developing a CCP-derived gene signature for predicting high-risk population of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods Our study retrospectively analyzed the transcriptome profiling and clinical information of HCC patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) projects. Uni- and multivariate cox regression models were conducted for identifying which hallmarks of cancer were risk factors of HCC. CCP-derived gene signature was developed with LASSO method. The predictive efficacy was verified by ROC curves and subgroup analyses. A nomogram was then generated and validated by ROC, calibration, and decisive curves. Immune cell infiltration was estimated with ssGSEA method. Potential small molecular compounds were predicted via CTRP and CMap analyses. The response to chemotherapeutic agents was evaluated based on the GDSC project. Results Among hallmarks of cancer, CCP was identified as a dominant risk factor for HCC prognosis. CCP-derived gene signature displayed the favorable predictive efficacy in HCC prognosis independent of other clinicopathological parameters. A nomogram was generated for optimizing risk stratification and quantifying risk evaluation. CCP-derived signature was in relation to immune cell infiltration, HLA, and immune checkpoint expression. Combining CTRP and CMap analyses, fluvastatin was identified as a promising therapeutic agent against HCC. Furthermore, CCP-derived signature might be applied for predicting the response to doxorubicin and gemcitabine. Conclusion Collectively, CCP-derived gene signature was a promising marker in prediction of survival outcomes and therapeutic responses for HCC patients.

Highlights

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), an aggressive malignancy with undesirable prognosis, occupies 85% of liver cancer cases, which usually develops in the context of chronic liver diseases [1]

  • cycle progression (CCP) Acts as a Dominant Risk Factor for HCC Prognosis among Cancer Hallmarks

  • Findings suggested that CCP acted as a dominant risk factor for HCC prognosis among cancer hallmarks

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), an aggressive malignancy with undesirable prognosis, occupies 85% of liver cancer cases, which usually develops in the context of chronic liver diseases [1]. The complex etiology and highly intratumoral and intertumoral heterogeneity make prognosis prediction more challenging [2]. Emerging evidence demonstrates that genomic signatures can be applied for risk stratification and prognostic prediction in HCC [3,4,5]. Due to insufficient sample size, interpatient, intertumoral, and intratumoral heterogeneity, and technical bias, most of prognostic models possess low reproducibility, which cannot be utilized for clinical routine practice [6]. New methods of identifying high-risk subgroups of HCC patients will bring great implications to personalized cancer care

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