Abstract
BackgroundYoung lung cancer as a small subgroup of lung cancer has not been fully studied. Most of the previous studies focused on the clinicopathological features, but studies of molecular characteristics are still few and limited. Here, we explore the characteristics of prognosis and variation in young lung cancer patients with NSCLC.MethodsA total of 5639 young lung cancer samples (NSCLC, age ≤40) were screened from the SEER and the same number of the old (NSCLC, age ≥60) were screened by propensity score matching to evaluate the prognosis of two groups. 165 treatment-naïve patients diagnosed with NSCLC were enrolled to explore the molecular feature difference between two age-varying groups. CCLE cell line expression data was used to verify the finding from the cohort of 165 patients.ResultsThe overall survival of the young lung cancer group was significantly better than the old. Germline analysis showed a trend that the young group contained a higher incidence of germline alterations. The TMB of the young group was lower. Meanwhile, the heterogeneity and evolutionary degrees of the young lung cancer group were also lower than the old. The mutation spectrums of two groups exhibited variance with LRP1B, SMARCA4, STK11, FAT2, RBM10, FANCM mutations, EGFR L858R more recurrent in the old group and EML4-ALK fusions, BCL2L11 deletion polymorphism, EGFR 19DEL, 20IN more recurrent in the young group. For the base substitution, the young showed a lower fraction of transversion. Further, we performed a pathway analysis and found the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor resistance pathway enriched in the young lung cancer group, which was validated in gene expression data later.ConclusionsThere were significantly different molecular features of the young lung cancer group. The young lung cancer group had a more simple alteration structure. Alteration spectrums and base substitution types varied between two groups, implying the different pathogenesis. The young lung cancer group had more potential treatment choices. Although young lung patients had better outcomes, there were still adverse factors of them, suggesting that the young group still needs more caution for treatment choice and monitoring after the treatment to further improve the prognosis.
Highlights
IntroductionApproximately 85% of patients are diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) [1]
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death in China and worldwide
To confirm whether there was a prognosis difference between two groups separated by age, a total of 5639 young lung cancer samples were screened from the SEER and the same number of old lung cancer samples were screened with propensity score matching (PSM)
Summary
Approximately 85% of patients are diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) [1]. The clinical characteristics showed that the young lung cancer group tended to be female, non-smoking, and with lung adenoma carcinomas [2, 3]. The young lung cancer group was often in the advanced stage when diagnosed [4]. Despite the relatively advanced stage of the young lung cancer group, previous studies showed a generally better prognosis of the young lung cancer group compared with the old lung cancer group [4,5,6,7]. We explore the characteristics of prognosis and variation in young lung cancer patients with NSCLC
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