Frontiers in Oncology (Jan 2023)

A new immune signature for survival prediction and immune checkpoint molecules in non-small cell lung cancer

  • Shuai Han,
  • Dongjie Jiang,
  • Feng Zhang,
  • Kun Li,
  • Kun Jiao,
  • Jingyun Hu,
  • Haihan Song,
  • Qin-Yun Ma,
  • Jian Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1095313
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundImmune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy has brought remarkable clinical benefits to patients with advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). However, the prognosis remains largely variable.MethodsThe profiles of immune-related genes for patients with NSCLC were extracted from TCGA database, ImmPort dataset, and IMGT/GENE-DB database. Coexpression modules were constructed using WGCNA and 4 modules were identified. The hub genes of the module with the highest correlations with tumor samples were identified. Then integrative bioinformatics analyses were performed to unveil the hub genes participating in tumor progression and cancer-associated immunology of NSCLC. Cox regression and Lasso regression analyses were conducted to screen prognostic signature and to develop a risk model.ResultsFunctional analysis showed that immune-related hub genes were involved in the migration, activation, response, and cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction of immune cells. Most of the hub genes had a high frequency of gene amplifications. MASP1 and SEMA5A presented the highest mutation rate. The ratio of M2 macrophages and naïve B cells revealed a strong negative association while the ratio of CD8 T cells and activated CD4 memory T cells showed a strong positive association. Resting mast cells predicted superior overall survival. Interactions including protein–protein, lncRNA and transcription factor interactions were analyzed and 9 genes were selected by LASSO regression analysis to construct and verify a prognostic signature. Unsupervised hub genes clustering resulted in 2 distinct NSCLC subgroups. The TIDE score and the drug sensitivity of gemcitabine, cisplatin, docetaxel, erlotinib and paclitaxel were significantly different between the 2 immune-related hub gene subgroups.ConclusionsThese findings suggested that our immune-related genes can provide clinical guidance for the diagnosis and prognosis of different immunophenotypes and facilitate the management of immunotherapy in NSCLC.

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