Abstract

Early and precise prediction is an important way to reduce the poor prognosis of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) patients. Nevertheless, the widely used tumor, node, and metastasis (TNM) staging system based on anatomical information only often could not achieve adequate performance on foreseeing the prognosis of LUAD patients. This study thus aimed to examine whether the long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), known highly involved in the tumorigenesis of LUAD through the competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) mechanism, could provide additional information to improve prognosis prediction of LUAD patients. To prove the hypothesis, a dataset consisting of both RNA sequencing data and clinical pathological data, obtained from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, was analyzed. Then, differentially expressed RNAs (DElncRNAs, DEmiRNAs, and DEmRNAs) were identified and a lncRNA–miRNA–mRNA ceRNA network was constructed based on those differentially expressed RNAs. Functional enrichment analysis revealed that this ceRNA network was highly enriched in some cancer-associated signaling pathways. Next, lasso-Cox model was run 1,000 times to recognize the potential survival-related combinations of the candidate lncRNAs in the ceRNA network, followed by the “best subset selection” to further optimize these lncRNA-based combinations, and a seven-lncRNA prognostic signature with the best performance was determined. Based on the median risk score, LUAD patients could be well distinguished into high-/low-risk subgroups. The Kaplan–Meier survival curve showed that LUAD patients in the high-risk group had significantly shorter overall survival than those in the low-risk group (log-rank test P = 4.52 × 10–9). The ROC curve indicated that the clinical genomic model including both the TNM staging system and the signature had a superior performance in predicting the patients’ overall survival compared to the clinical model with the TNM staging system only. Further stratification analysis suggested that the signature could work well in the different strata of the stage, gender, or age, rendering it to be a wide application. Finally, a ceRNA subnetwork related to the signature was extracted, demonstrating its high involvement in the tumorigenesis mechanism of LUAD. In conclusion, the present study established a lncRNA-based molecular signature, which can significantly improve prognosis prediction for LUAD patients.

Highlights

  • Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), a major type of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), has a low survival rate and an increasing incidence (Matsuda and Machii, 2015; Denisenko et al, 2018)

  • Our study demonstrated that the seven-Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) prognostic signature effectively enhanced the prognosis prediction performance over the conventional TNM staging system

  • The top 15 Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathways (P-value < 0.05) that the network was involved are shown in Figure 3B, indicating that the competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) network for LUAD was closely related to some cancer-associated pathways, such as microRNAs in cancer, transcriptional misregulation in cancer, corresponding coefficients derived from the multivariate cellular senescence, cell cycle, p53 signaling pathway, small cell Cox regression analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), a major type of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), has a low survival rate and an increasing incidence (Matsuda and Machii, 2015; Denisenko et al, 2018). The etiology of LUAD is multifactorial, involving a large number of environmental factors and internal factors (Rajer et al, 2014). Because of the lack of specific symptoms and signs, LUAD coupling with complex and diverse clinical manifestations is missed and misdiagnosed (Del et al, 2017). When most LUAD patients are diagnosed, they are already in an advanced stage. Many kinds of treatments, including surgical resection, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and chemoradiotherapy, were applied to improve patient’s survival rate, the overall 5-year survival rate is still extremely bleak (Wakeam et al, 2017). Early detection and diagnosis is vital to improve LUAD patient’s poor prognosis

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