Abstract

Lung cancer mortality remains high even after successful resection. Adjuvant treatment benefits stage II and III patients, but not stage I patients, and most studies fail to predict recurrence in stage I patients. Our study included 211 lung adenocarcinoma patients (stages I–IIIA; 81% stage I) who received curative resections at Taipei Veterans General Hospital between January 2001 and December 2012. We generated a prediction model using 153 samples, with validation using an additional 58 clinical outcome-blinded samples. Gene expression profiles were generated using formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue samples and microarrays. Data analysis was performed using a supervised clustering method. The prediction model generated from mixed stage samples successfully separated patients at high vs. low risk for recurrence. The validation tests hazard ratio (HR = 4.38) was similar to that of the training tests (HR = 4.53), indicating a robust training process. Our prediction model successfully distinguished high- from low-risk stage IA and IB patients, with a difference in 5-year disease-free survival between high- and low-risk patients of 42% for stage IA and 45% for stage IB (p < 0.05). We present a novel and effective model for identifying lung adenocarcinoma patients at high risk for recurrence who may benefit from adjuvant therapy. Our prediction performance of the difference in disease free survival between high risk and low risk groups demonstrates more than two fold improvement over earlier published results.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer patients experience high mortality even after tumor-negative resection, adjuvant therapy can improve survival

  • We present a novel and effective model for identifying lung adenocarcinoma patients at high risk for recurrence who may benefit from adjuvant therapy

  • The hazard ratio (HR) of recurrence for high- vs low-risk groups from the validation samples was 4.38, which was very close to the HR of recurrence (4.53) from the training set

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Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer patients experience high mortality even after tumor-negative resection, adjuvant therapy can improve survival. Disease stage is used to guide adjuvant treatment decisions [1]. Adjuvant treatment is recommended for stage II and IIIA patients, and provides measurable survival benefit. Among stage IA and IB patients, only high-risk IB patients are considered for adjuvant treatment, and may receive only marginal benefit [2]. Stage IA and IB non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients have 5-year overall survival (OS) rates of only 73% and 54%, respectively [3]. Studies suggest that adjuvant treatment to ALL stage I patients is detrimental for stage IA and provides no benefit for stage www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget

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