BMC Pulmonary Medicine (Jun 2022)
Characterization of a prognostic model for lung squamous cell carcinoma based on eight stemness index-related genes
Abstract
Abstract Background Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are implicated in cancer progression, chemoresistance, and poor prognosis; thus, they may be promising therapeutic targets. In this study, we aimed to investigate the prognostic application of differentially expressed CSC-related genes in lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC). Methods The mRNA stemness index (mRNAsi)-related differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in tumors were identified and further categorized by LASSO Cox regression analysis and 1,000-fold cross-validation, followed by the construction of a prognostic score model for risk stratification. The fractions of tumor-infiltrating immune cells and immune checkpoint genes were analyzed in different risk groups. Results We found 404 mRNAsi-related DEGs in LUSC, 77 of which were significantly associated with overall survival. An eight-gene prognostic signature (PPP1R27, TLX2, ANKLE1, TIGD3, AMH, KCNK3, FLRT3, and PPBP) was identified and used to construct a risk score model. The TCGA set was dichotomized into two risk groups that differed significantly (p = 0.00057) in terms of overall survival time (1, 3, 5-year AUC = 0.830, 0.749, and 0.749, respectively). The model performed well in two independent GEO datasets (p = 0.029, 0.033; 1-year AUC = 0747, 0.783; 3-year AUC = 0.746, 0.737; 5-year AUC = 0.706, 0.723). Low-risk patients had markedly increased numbers of CD8+ T cells and M1 macrophages and downregulated immune checkpoint genes compared to the corresponding values in high-risk patients (p < 0.05). Conclusion A stemness-related prognostic model based on eight prognostic genes in LUSC was developed and validated. The results of this study would have prognostic and therapeutic implications.
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