Abstract

BackgroundNon-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents more than about 80% of the lung cancer. The early stages of NSCLC can be treated with complete resection with a good prognosis. However, most cases are detected at late stage of the disease. The average survival rate of the patients with invasive lung cancer is only about 4%. Adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS) is an intermediate subtype of lung adenocarcinoma that exhibits early stage growth patterns but can develop into invasion.MethodsIn this study, we used RNA-seq data from normal, AIS, and invasive lung cancer tissues to identify a gene module that represents the distinguishing characteristics of AIS as AIS-specific genes. Two differential expression analysis algorithms were employed to identify the AIS-specific genes. Then, the subset of the best performed AIS-specific genes for the early lung cancer prediction were selected by random forest. Finally, the performances of the early lung cancer prediction were assessed using random forest, support vector machine (SVM) and artificial neural networks (ANNs) on four independent early lung cancer datasets including one tumor-educated blood platelets (TEPs) dataset.ResultsBased on the differential expression analysis, 107 AIS-specific genes that consisted of 93 protein-coding genes and 14 long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) were identified. The significant functions associated with these genes include angiogenesis and ECM-receptor interaction, which are highly related to cancer development and contribute to the smoking-free lung cancers. Moreover, 12 of the AIS-specific lncRNAs are involved in lung cancer progression by potentially regulating the ECM-receptor interaction pathway. The feature selection by random forest identified 20 of the AIS-specific genes as early stage lung cancer signatures using the dataset obtained from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) lung adenocarcinoma samples. Of the 20 signatures, two were lncRNAs, BLACAT1 and CTD-2527I21.15 which have been reported to be associated with bladder cancer, colorectal cancer and breast cancer. In blind classification for three independent tissue sample datasets, these signature genes consistently yielded about 98% accuracy for distinguishing early stage lung cancer from normal cases. However, the prediction accuracy for the blood platelets samples was only 64.35% (sensitivity 78.1%, specificity 50.59%, and AUROC 0.747).ConclusionsThe comparison of AIS with normal and invasive tumor revealed diseases-specific genes and offered new insights into the mechanism underlying AIS progression into an invasive tumor. These genes can also serve as the signatures for early diagnosis of lung cancer with high accuracy. The expression profile of gene signatures identified from tissue cancer samples yielded remarkable early cancer prediction for tissues samples, however, relatively lower accuracy for boold platelets samples.

Highlights

  • Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents more than about 80% of the lung cancer

  • Comparison of gene expression in Adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS) and invasive lung cancer To investigate the genes that dominate the intermediate type of AIS and underlie different phenotypes, we collected the RNA-seq library (GSE52248) consisted of normal, AIS and invasive cancer samples of six lung cancer patients [3]

  • The differential expression analysis via edgeR was performed on 16,501 expressed genes consisted of 15,106 protein-coding genes and 1395 Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA)

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Summary

Introduction

Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) represents more than about 80% of the lung cancer. The average survival rate of the patients with invasive lung cancer is only about 4%. Adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS) is an intermediate subtype of lung adenocarcinoma that exhibits early stage growth patterns but can develop into invasion. Non-small cell lung cancer accounts for about 80% of the lung cancer cases and is consist of various subtypes [1]. Most of the deaths caused by lung cancer are in late stages which are due to the distant metastasis and invasion [2]. The early stages or non-invasive subtypes of lung cancer can be cured [2]. Lung adenocarcinoma in situ is a subtype of NSCLC and shows non-invasive growth patterns. AIS can develop into an invasive stage of lung cancer that has only approximate 4% patient survival rate [1].

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