Abstract

BackgroundThe prognosis of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients is difficult to predict or describe due to its high-level heterogeneity and complex aetiologic factors. Ferroptosis is a novel form of iron-dependent cell death that is closely related to tumour growth and progression. This study aims to clarify the predictive value of ferroptosis-related genes (FRGs) on the overall survival(OS) of OSCC patients.MethodsThe mRNA expression profile of FRGs and clinical information of patients with OSCC were collected from the TCGA database. Candidate differentially expressed ferroptosis-related genes (DE-FRGs) were identified by analysing differences between OSCC and adjacent normal tissues. A gene signature of prognosis-related DE-FRGs was established by univariate Cox analysis and LASSO analysis in the training set. Patients were then divided into high- and low-risk groups according to the cut-off value of risk scores, A nomogram was constructed to quantify the contributions of gene signature and clinical parameters to OS. Then several bioinformatics analyses were used to verify the reliability and accuracy of the model in the validation set. Finally, single-sample gene set enrichment analysis (ssGSEA) was also performed to reveal the underlying differences in immune status between different risk groups.ResultsA prognostic model was constructed based on 10 ferroptosis-related genes. Patients in high-risk group had a significantly worse OS (p < 0.001). The gene signature was verified as an independent predictor for the OS of OSCC patients (HR > 1, p < 0.001). The receiver operating characteristic curve displayed the favour predictive performance of the risk model. The prediction nomogram successfully quantified each indicator’s contribution to survival and the concordance index and calibration plots showed its superior predictive capacity. Finally, ssGSEA preliminarily indicated that the poor prognosis in the high-risk group might result from the dysregulation of immune status.ConclusionThis study established a 10-ferroptosis-releated gene signature and nomogram that can be used to predict the prognosis of OSCC patients, which provides new insight for future anticancer therapies based on potential FRG targets.

Highlights

  • The prognosis of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients is difficult to predict or describe due to its high-level heterogeneity and complex aetiologic factors

  • The construction of prognostic models based on public databases and generation sequencing (NSG) provides more comprehensive clinical-genetic prognostic value and prognostic models based on ferroptosis are becoming a research hotspot for predicting overall survival (OS) in different cancers [22,23,24, 26, 27].the predictive value of ferroptosis-related genes for the OS of OSCC patients’ remains unknown and warrants further study

  • A novel prognostic signature based on 10 ferroptosisrelated genes was first constructed and a nomogram to predict OS for patients with OSCC was subsequently established. single-sample gene set enrichment analysis (ssGSEA) revealed some cancer-related and immune-related pathways that affect the prognosis of OSCC

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Summary

Introduction

The prognosis of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) patients is difficult to predict or describe due to its high-level heterogeneity and complex aetiologic factors. This study aims to clarify the predictive value of ferroptosis-related genes (FRGs) on the overall survival(OS) of OSCC patients. Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the most common head and neck malignancies [1, 2]. The five-year overall survival (OS) rate for OSCC remains at approximately 40–50% despite recent advances in diagnostic and therapeutic approaches [8]. It is difficult to predict or describe the prognosis of OSCC because of its high-level heterogeneity and complex aetiologic factors.

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