Abstract

Increasing evidence has highlighted the important roles of dysregulated long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) expression in tumorigenesis, tumor progression and metastasis. However, lncRNA expression patterns and their prognostic value for tumor relapse in lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) patients have not been systematically elucidated. In this study, we evaluated lncRNA expression profiles by repurposing the publicly available microarray expression profiles from a large cohort of LUAD patients and identified specific lncRNA signature closely associated with tumor relapse in LUAD from significantly altered lncRNAs using the weighted voting algorithm and cross-validation strategy, which was able to discriminate between relapsed and non-relapsed LUAD patients with sensitivity of 90.9% and specificity of 81.8%. From the discovery dataset, we developed a risk score model represented by the nine relapse-related lncRNAs for prognosis prediction, which classified patients into high-risk and low-risk subgroups with significantly different recurrence-free survival (HR=45.728, 95% CI=6.241-335.1; p=1.69e-04). The prognostic value of this relapse-related lncRNA signature was confirmed in the testing dataset and other two independent datasets. Multivariable Cox regression analysis and stratified analysis showed that the relapse-related lncRNA signature was independent of other clinical variables. Integrative in silico functional analysis suggested that these nine relapse-related lncRNAs revealed biological relevance to disease relapse, such as cell cycle, DNA repair and damage and cell death. Our study demonstrated that the relapse-related lncRNA signature may not only help to identify LUAD patients at high risk of relapse benefiting from adjuvant therapy but also could provide novel insights into the understanding of molecular mechanism of recurrent disease.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer, including small cell lung cancer (SCC) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), is one of the most common cancers that severely threaten human health

  • Identification of altered long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) expression associated with tumor relapse Here, the Okayama dataset, which is the largest dataset in our study, contains 64 Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) patients who developed relapse and 162 relapse-free LUAD patients [35]

  • Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of 121 LUAD patients in the discovery dataset according to the expression patterns of these 25 differentially expressed lncRNAs showed two distant patient clusters, which were highly correlated with the tumor relapse status (p=7.557e-12, chi-square test; Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer, including small cell lung cancer (SCC) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), is one of the most common cancers that severely threaten human health. The findings from transcriptome profiling analysis have shown highly aberrant lncRNA expression pattern in various types of human cancer [15, 16]. These differently expressed lncRNAs may be associated with tumorigenesis, tumor progression and metastasis [17, 18]. Several combinations of multiple lncRNAs were proposed as potential prognostic signature associated with overall survival in some cancers, including glioblastoma multiforme, colorectal cancer, breast cancer, oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma, non-small cell lung cancer and multiple myeloma [22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]. LncRNA expression patterns and their prognostic value for LUAD relapse have not been systematically elucidated

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