A prognostic signature for lung adenocarcinoma in people who have never smoked

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Abstract

Knowledge of tumor cell dynamics can inform prognosis and treatment yet is largely lacking for lung adenocarcinoma in people who have never smoked (NS-LUAD). With RNA-seq data from 684 NS-LUAD and validation in an independent dataset, we identified three subtypes with distinct phenotypic traits and cell compositions. Additional genomic and histological data further characterized the subtypes. ‘Steady’ , marked by low proliferation, high alveolar cell fraction, moderate-to-well differentiation, and fewer driver genes’ alterations, is linked to prolonged survival and low immune evasion. ‘Proliferative ’ shows high proliferation markers, TP53 mutations, and gene fusions. ‘Chaotic’ , with high epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition markers, has the worst prognosis even within stage I tumors. Lacking known molecular or histological characteristics, this aggressive subtype is solely identified by transcriptomic data. A 60-gene signature recapitulates the overall classification and strongly predicts survival even within subgroups based on tumor stage or known genomic features, emphasizing its potential for improving NS-LUAD prognostication in clinical settings.

Significance

The transcriptome of 684 lung adenocarcinomas in people who have never smoked (NS-LUAD) identifies three subtypes with different cellular dynamics, and genomic and morphologic features. A 60-gene signature accurately stratifies subjects for mortality risk, even in stage I, offering a clinically applicable tool for treatment decision making in NS-LUAD patients.

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