Abstract

Approximately half of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients experience disease recurrence and metastasis, and these individuals frequently fail to respond to treatment due to their clinical and biological diversity. Here, we aimed to identify a prognostic signature consisting of a small gene group for precisely predicting CRC heterogeneity. We performed transcriptomic profiling using RNA-seq data generated from the primary tissue samples of 130 CRC patients. A prognostic index (PI) based on recurrence-associated genes was developed and validated in two larger independent CRC patient cohorts (n = 795). The association between the PI and prognosis of CRC patients was evaluated using Kaplan–Meier plots, log-rank tests, a Cox regression analysis and a RT-PCR analysis. Transcriptomic profiling in 130 CRC patients identified two distinct subtypes associated with systemic recurrence. Pathway enrichment and RT-PCR analyses revealed an eleven gene signature incorporated into the PI system, which was a significant prognostic indicator of CRC. Multivariate and subset analyses showed that PI was an independent risk factor (HR = 1.812, 95% CI = 1.342–2.448, P < 0.001) with predictive value to identify low-risk stage II patients who responded the worst to adjuvant chemotherapy. Finally, a comparative analysis with previously reported Consensus Molecular Subgroup (CMS), high-risk patients classified by the PI revealed a distinct molecular property similar to CMS4, associated with a poor prognosis. This novel PI predictor based on an eleven gene signature likely represents a surrogate diagnostic tool for identifying high-risk CRC patients and for predicting the worst responding patients for adjuvant chemotherapy.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer and fourth leading cause of cancer death worldwide[1]

  • Identification of two distinct prognostic subtypes in CRC by transcriptomic profiling We first evaluated a correlation between systemic recurrence and gene expression using the data from the AMC cohort

  • Because adjuvant chemotherapy data were available in the combined cohort, we examined whether the prognostic index (PI) could predict CRC patients who would benefit or not from adjuvant chemotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer and fourth leading cause of cancer death worldwide[1]. Pathological staging is the gold standard for the prognosis and determination of adjuvant chemotherapy treatment in CRC2, few studies are available as a predictive tool for stage-specific recurrence. Kim et al Experimental & Molecular Medicine (2019) 51:115. Metastatic resection of CRC in patients with isolated liver and/or lung metastasis remains the only option for potential cure[6,7]. Even when resection is combined with modern adjuvant systemic regimens, this treatment is curative in only 20% of patients and mostly fails due to tumor progression and dissemination. A better molecular understanding of CRC is urgently needed for early and accurate patient prognostication, enabling precision medicine for cure[8]

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