Literature DB >> 27484806

A prognostic predictor panel with DNA methylation biomarkers for early-stage lung adenocarcinoma in Asian and Caucasian populations.

I-Ying Kuo1,2, Jayu Jen1,2, Lien-Huei Hsu3,4, Han-Shui Hsu5, Wu-Wei Lai6, Yi-Ching Wang7,8.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The incidence of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) is increasing worldwide with different prognosis even in early-stage patients. We aimed to identify a prognostic panel with multiple DNA methylation biomarkers to predict survival in early-stage LUAD patients of different racial groups.
METHODS: The methylation array, pyrosequencing methylation assay, Cox regression and Kaplan-Meier analyses were conducted to build the risk score equations of selected probes in a training cohort of 69 Asian LUAD patients. The risk score model was verified in another cohort of 299 Caucasian LUAD patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database.
RESULTS: We performed a Cox regression analysis, in which the regression coefficients were obtained for eight probes corresponding to eight genes (AGTRL1, ALDH1A3, BDKRB1, CTSE, EFNA2, NFAM1, SEMA4A and TMEM129). The risk score was derived from sum of each methylated probes multiplied by its corresponding coefficient. Patients with the risk score greater than the median value showed poorer overall survival compared with other patients (p = 0.007). Such a risk score significantly predicted patients showing poor survival in TCGA cohort (p = 0.036). A multivariate analysis was further performed to demonstrate that the eight-probe panel association with poor outcome in early-stage LUAD patients remained significant even after adjusting for different clinical variables including staging parameters (hazard ratio, 2.03; p = 0.039).
CONCLUSIONS: We established a proof-of-concept prognostic panel consisting of eight-probe signature to predict survival of early-stage LUAD patients of Asian and Caucasian populations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DNA methylation array; Lung adenocarcinoma; Prognosis; Pyrosequencing; Risk score

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27484806      PMCID: PMC4969679          DOI: 10.1186/s12929-016-0276-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomed Sci        ISSN: 1021-7770            Impact factor:   8.410


Background

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths with an increasing incidence of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) subtype worldwide [1]. Prognosis may vary in patients with the same stage tumor because cancer is characterized by genetic, epigenetic, and phenotypic changes that result in a tremendous variability in clinical behavior [2, 3]. Therefore, the development of additional molecular markers for survival prediction of LUAD is required. DNA methylation, which usually occurs in CpG dinucleotides, is a major epigenetic modification in mammalian genome [4-6]. High-throughput methylation arrays are now available to determine DNA methylation levels of thousands of CpG sites, simultaneously [7-9]. This technology enables large-scale DNA methylation analysis to identify informative DNA methylation biomarkers in lung cancer [7, 10–16]. Many reports have demonstrated that each cancer subtypes such as lung adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma has its own methylation signature [12, 13, 15, 16]. Therefore, in the current study we focus on the development of survival predictors in early-stage LUAD patients by performing genome-wide methylation analysis and pyrosequencing quantitative methylation assay to select eight DNA methylation probes in a training cohort of 69 patients recruited in Taipei Veterans General Hospital (TVGH). We also included certain clinical parameters that are known to affect prognosis [2, 3, 17–19] along with the selected eight-probe panel to the Cox regression analysis. The relevance of our finding has been validated in a cohort of 299 patients as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) project.

Methods

Patients and tissue samples

A total of 69 surgically resected LUAD patients in early stage (stages I and II) were recruited from Taipei Veterans General Hospital (TVGH), after obtaining appropriate institutional review board permission (#98-03-18A) and informed consent from the patients. These LUAD patients with checked clinical data and sufficient amount of DNA available for successful genome-wide methylation and pyrosequencing quantitative methylation assays were defined as a training cohort. A validation cohort of 299 LUAD patients with clinical follow-up data and methylation microarray data available from TCGA were collected. The mean follow-up period for training cohort was 82 months (range 9–157 months) and for validation cohort was 37 months (range 12–242 months). The end of the follow-up in TVGH was defined as January 2016 and TCGA as April 2015. Patients with clinicopathological characteristics are shown in Table 1.
Table 1

Characteristics of the lung adenocarcinoma patients included in the current study

CohortTVGHa (%)TCGAa (%)
N = 69 (100 %) N = 299 (100 %)
Age
  < 65 year-old25 (36.2 %)124 (41.5 %)
  ≥ 65 year-old44 (63.8 %)166 (55.5 %)
Stage
 Stage IA13 (18.8 %)113 (37.8 %)
 Stage IB42 (60.9 %)104 (34.8 %)
 Stage IIA4 (5.8 %)32 (10.7 %)
 Stage IIB10 (14.5 %)50 (16.7 %)
T stage
 Stage 116 (23.2 %)122 (40.8 %)
 Stage 251 (73.9 %)159 (53.2 %)
 Stage 32 (2.9 %)18 (6.0 %)
N stage
 N056 (81.2 %)236 (78.9 %)
  ≥ N112 (17.4 %)57 (19.1 %)
M stage
 M069 (100 %)299 (100 %)
  ≥ M10 (0.0 %)0 (0.0 %)
Surgery
 Lobectomy60 (87.0 %)-b
 Wedge resection8 (11.6 %)-b
 Segmentectomy1 (1.4 %)-b
Chemotherapy
 No51 (73.9 %)-b
 Yes15 (21.7 %)-b
TKI treatment
 No62 (89.9 %)-b
 Yes6 (8.7 %)-b

aTVGH: Taipei Veterans General Hospital; TCGA: The Cancer Genome Atlas

bInformation was not available for patients from TCGA

Characteristics of the lung adenocarcinoma patients included in the current study aTVGH: Taipei Veterans General Hospital; TCGA: The Cancer Genome Atlas bInformation was not available for patients from TCGA

Genomic DNA extraction and sodium bisulfite conversion

Genomic DNA from primary tumor tissue samples of 69 patients from TVGH were extracted using proteinase K digestion and phenol-chloroform extraction. A total of 1 μg genomic DNA was used for bisulfite conversion using the EpiTect Bisulfite kit (Qiagen, Duesseldorf, Germany) according to the manufacturer’s protocols.

The genome-wide methylation analysis platform

The Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation27 BeadChip (27,578 CpG dinucleotides for 14,495 genes) was adapted for DNA methylation detection according to manufacturer’s manual. DNA methylation levels were reported as β-values by calculating the ratio of intensities between locus-specific methylated and unmethylated bead-bound probes. The β-value is a continuous variable, ranging from 0 (unmethylated) to 1 (fully methylated). The methylation array data can be viewed online under GEO accession number GSE83845.

Pyrosequencing assay

To quantify cytosine methylation in individual CpG sites of candidate methylation probes identified by methylation array, bisulfite-converted DNA was analyzed using a pyrosequencing system (PyroMark Q24, Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). Specific pyrosequencing primer and PCR primer were designed for “target” CpG sites in the probes to be analyzed. Pyrosequencing was carried out in accordance with the manufacturer’s protocol (Qiagen). The target CpG sites were evaluated by converting the resulting pyrograms to numerical values for peak heights. Primer sequences are listed in Additional file 1: Table S1, and the genomic map of the detected CpG sites are shown in Additional file 1: Figure S1.

Data processing and statistical analysis

Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was performed to determine the accuracy of the established CpG panel [area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity, and specificity]. The univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses were conducted to explore the relationship between patient survival and several explanatory variables for defining the hazard ratio (HR) and confidence intervals (CI) of cancer death risk of variables using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 17.0 (SPSS Inc., Headquarters Chicago, IL, USA). Overall survival curves were calculated according to the Kaplan-Meier method. p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

Marker discovery in genome-scale DNA methylation dataset

In the marker selection phase of this study, we collected surgically dissected tumors of 69 early-stage LUAD patients from TVGH to form a training cohort for genome-wide methylation array analysis using Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation27 BeadChip. Procedures were performed as described below and shown in Fig. 1. First, we obtained 9384 qualified probes after removing potentially problematic probes, probes containing SNP, repeat sequencing, probes not in CpG island, probes in the X-chromosome and the non-differential probes with β-value greater than 0.9 or less than 0.1 in all samples after methylation analysis. Second, we selected 2815 informative probes with large variance of βtumor (top-30 % ranked) among the patients. Third, for each probe, a supervised principal components (Superpc) analysis [20] was applied to compare the survival distributions between patients with methylation levels above and below the mean level of all tumor tissues analyzed; 100 probes were chosen based on these tests. Fourth, since pyrosequencing assay is a highly sensitive method for detection of DNA methylation [12, 17, 21], we performed pyrosequencing methylation analyses. Of these probes, pyrosequencing was successfully designed and performed for 34 probes. A high concordance in quantifying the CpG methylation level was observed between DNA methylation array and pyrosequencing assay (Fig. 2). Fifth, eight specific candidate probes corresponding to eight genes showed significant correlation with survival by univariate Cox regression, including Angiotensin II receptor-like 1 (AGTRL1), Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family member A3 (ALDH1A3), Bradykinin receptor B1 (BDKRB1), Cathepsin E (CTSE), Ephrin A2 (EFNA2), NFAT activating protein with ITAM motif 1 (NFAM1), Semaphorin 4A (SEMA4A), and Transmembrane protein 129 (TMEM129) (Table 2). Sixth, we applied receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis to determine the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of eight-probe panel in the validation cohort of TVGH patients. Finally, Kaplan-Meier method and multivariate Cox regression analyses were performed for the eight-probe panel in the TVGH patients and validated in 299 early-stage LUAD patients from TCGA datasets (as described below).
Fig. 1

Flowchart of the probe selection and clinical validation procedures. Six steps were used to select the eight methylation gene probes from the methylation array in the training cohort of 69 LUAD patients from TVGH. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis with the regression coefficients of eight probes was first performed to confirm the survival prediction of risk score calculation. The multivariate Cox regression was then performed to validate clinical performance of the eight-probe panel after adjusting for different clinical variables. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and multivariate Cox regression method were also performed in the validation cohort of 299 LUAD patients from TCGA database

Fig. 2

Correlation of methylation level between Illumina array and pyrosequencing method of top 34 methylated probes in early-stage LUAD patients. Dot-plot analyses show a high concordance of methylation level between pyrosequencing DNA methylation assay (Y-axis: %) and Illumina genome-wide methylation assay (X-axis: β value) and of 34 methylated probes. An average correlation coefficient was 0.81 (R = 0.81) among the probes

Table 2

Univariate Cox model for 34 probes in the training cohort of LUAD by pyrosequencing methylation assay

No.probes IDa gene symbol p valueb No.probes IDa gene symbol p valueb
1cg04878152 AGTR1 0.68018cg05973262 NOTCH4 0.126
2cg25072179 AGTRL1 c 0.00119cg16678925 OR1A2 0.164
3cg27652350 ALDH1A3 c 0.00720cg10046892 PAQR6 0.386
4cg16787352 ANKRD9 0.22321cg11428724 PAX7 0.444
5cg10528989 BDKRB1 c 0.02122cg01431114 PDE10A 0.356
6cg16077929 CDKL1 0.37323cg13645078 PHLDA3 0.877
7cg21478437 CTSE c 0.00724cg24427660 PNPLA2 0.443
8cg11885098 EFNA2 c 0.00225cg09635067 RAB7L1 0.679
9cg03158400 FAM3B 0.21926cg10559803 RALGPS2 0.175
10cg00626466 GNS 0.38427cg15983538 SEMA4A c 0.030
11cg13228642 IER5 0.27528cg04275881 SLAMF8 0.103
12cg01226811 KCNJ8 0.56429cg16415058 SORCS1 0.265
13cg17536532 KIAA0649 0.33430cg15789095 SPOCD1 0.811
14cg10150813 KIAA0746 0.67231cg22594309 SYT2 0.944
15cg12610744 KRT4 0.06132cg21505886 TMEM129 c 0.004
16cg22820108 NCOR2 0.54633cg08108311 WNK4 0.296
17cg17568996 NFAM1 c 0.00234cg01184522 ZNF496 0.560

aProbes ID is the CpG number of designated probe used in Illumina Human Methylation27 Bead Chip

bUnivariate Cox regression

cGenes in bold font indicated statistical significance (p < 0.05) thus were selected for further analyses

Flowchart of the probe selection and clinical validation procedures. Six steps were used to select the eight methylation gene probes from the methylation array in the training cohort of 69 LUAD patients from TVGH. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis with the regression coefficients of eight probes was first performed to confirm the survival prediction of risk score calculation. The multivariate Cox regression was then performed to validate clinical performance of the eight-probe panel after adjusting for different clinical variables. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and multivariate Cox regression method were also performed in the validation cohort of 299 LUAD patients from TCGA database Correlation of methylation level between Illumina array and pyrosequencing method of top 34 methylated probes in early-stage LUAD patients. Dot-plot analyses show a high concordance of methylation level between pyrosequencing DNA methylation assay (Y-axis: %) and Illumina genome-wide methylation assay (X-axis: β value) and of 34 methylated probes. An average correlation coefficient was 0.81 (R = 0.81) among the probes Univariate Cox model for 34 probes in the training cohort of LUAD by pyrosequencing methylation assay aProbes ID is the CpG number of designated probe used in Illumina Human Methylation27 Bead Chip bUnivariate Cox regression cGenes in bold font indicated statistical significance (p < 0.05) thus were selected for further analyses

Sensitivity and specificity of the eight selected probes by ROC analysis

We examined the sensitivity and specificity of the eight selected probes by ROC curve analysis in the training cohort of 69 early-stage LUAD patients from TVGH. The area under the curve (AUC) of eight-probe together was 0.802 (Fig. 3a), indicating that the eight-probe signature showed good sensitivity and specificity in the ROC analysis. To assess the accuracy of the prognostic predictor panel, ROC curve analysis was performed on another randomly selected eight probes from the top 34 candidate probes. The AUC was 0.602 (Fig. 3b), suggesting a stronger prediction power of the specifically selected eight probes than the randomly selected probes. Thus, we defined this eight-probe signature as the prognostic predictor panel of early-stage LUAD.
Fig. 3

ROC curves of the prognostic predictor panel in the training cohort from TVGH. Sensitivity is indicated in the Y-axis, whereas 1 substrated by specificity (1-Specificity) is indicated in the X-axis. a The area under the curve (AUC) of ROC analysis for the eight selected probes panel. b The AUC of ROC analysis for the eight randomly selected genes

ROC curves of the prognostic predictor panel in the training cohort from TVGH. Sensitivity is indicated in the Y-axis, whereas 1 substrated by specificity (1-Specificity) is indicated in the X-axis. a The area under the curve (AUC) of ROC analysis for the eight selected probes panel. b The AUC of ROC analysis for the eight randomly selected genes

The risk score calculation and survival prediction of the eight-probe panel by Kaplan-Meier method

In the clinical validation phase, we first built the risk score for the eight selected methylation probes using the multivariate Cox regression analysis in the TVGH training cohort of 69 early-stage LUAD patients. These DNA methylation probe covariates were weighted by the regression coefficients to calculate the coefficient and hazard ratio for each patient. The risk score for each patient was derived from sum of methylation value of each probe multiplied by the corresponding coefficient, as following equation: risk score = AGTRL1 methylation value × (-0.015) + ALDH1A3 methylation value × (-0.023) + BDKRB1 methylation value × (-0.034) + CTSE methylation value × (0.022) + EFNA2 methylation value × (0.010) + NFAM1 methylation value × (-0.017) + SEMA4A methylation value × (-0.012) + TMEM129 methylation value × (-0.006). Example of risk score calculation for two patients is shown in Additional file 1: Figure S2. Furthermore, we used the risk score calculation ranging from -1.03 to -4.95 to classify patients into two groups by median value of -2.63 in the TVGH training cohort of 69 early-stage LUAD patients (upper panel, Fig. 4a). The Kaplan-Meier overall survival analysis was performed to show the relative survival in each of the two groups identified by the risk score calculation (middle panel, Fig. 4a). Patients with high risk score indeed had a short median survival time (MST) of 58.9 months compared with other patients. The difference in the MST and 95 % confidence interval (CI) between the two groups was highly significant (lower panel, Fig. 4a). Therefore, the median risk score (as -2.63) was chosen as the cutoff value for survival prediction in the TVGH cohort.
Fig. 4

Survival risk score prediction based on the selected eight-probe in LUAD patients. a The risk score was used to classify 69 TVGH patients in the training cohort into two groups by median (as -2.63) (upper). The Kaplan-Meier overall survival analysis was performed to show the relative median survival time (MST) in two groups identified by the risk score calculation (middle). The 95 % confidence interval of survival time and p values of various methods are shown as indicated (lower). b The risk score, MST, and p values were analyzed in the validation cohort of 299 LUAD patients from TCGA database

Survival risk score prediction based on the selected eight-probe in LUAD patients. a The risk score was used to classify 69 TVGH patients in the training cohort into two groups by median (as -2.63) (upper). The Kaplan-Meier overall survival analysis was performed to show the relative median survival time (MST) in two groups identified by the risk score calculation (middle). The 95 % confidence interval of survival time and p values of various methods are shown as indicated (lower). b The risk score, MST, and p values were analyzed in the validation cohort of 299 LUAD patients from TCGA database We further applied our risk score model to determine whether our finding could be validated in another cohort of 299 early-stage LUAD patients whose follow-up data were available in TCGA project, and methylation level was also determined by the Infinium Methylation array. The risk score calculated with the median value (as 0.47) classified the 299 TCGA patients into two groups (upper panel, Fig. 4b). Such a calculation predicted a subset of patient with a high risk score showing poorer survival with MST of 50.9 months (middle panel, Fig. 4b) with statistical significance (lower panel, Fig. 4b). These results indicated that the prognostic predictor panel consisting of the selected eight-probe showed a strong prediction value in the TCGA validation cohort.

Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis of the eight-probe panel

To determine whether the eight-probe panel is an independent variable associated with poor survival of early-stage LUAD patients, we performed the univariate and multivariate Cox regression model in both TVGH and TCGA cohorts. The univariate Cox regression analysis revealed that patients with risk score > median of the eight-probe panel, stage IIA, stage IIB, or lymph node metastases had poor outcome (p = 0.009, HR = 2.37, 95 % CI = 1.24–4.53 for risk score > median of the eight-probe panel; Table 3). Notably, multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that the eight-probe panel correlated with a relative risk of death of 2.03 (p = 0.039), even after adjusting for the tumor staging and metastasis status (Table 3), suggesting that the eight-probe panel was an independent risk factor of poor outcome.
Table 3

Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses of risk factors for cancer-related death in early-stage LUAD patients

TVGH (N = 69)a TCGA (N = 299)a
CharacteristicsUnivariate analysisMultivariate analysisc Univariate analysisMultivariate analysisc
HR (95 % CI)b p-valueb HR (95 % CI)b p-valueb HR (95 % CI)b p-valueb HR (95 % CI)b p-valueb
Eight-probe panel
 Risk < Median1.001.001.001.00
 Risk > Median2.37 (1.24–4.53) 0.009 2.03 (1.04–3.98) 0.039 1.66 (1.03–2.66) 0.038 1.57 (0.96–2.57)0.073
Gender
 Male1.00-1.00-
 Female1.43 (0.71–2.88)0.321--0.78 (0.49–1.26)0.315--
Stage
 Stage IA1.001.001.001.00
 Stage IB2.13 (0.73–6.16)0.1642.01 (0.69–5.86)0.1991.15 (0.63–2.11)0.6421.17 (0.63–2.16)0.616
 Stage IIA8.76 (2.10–36.53) 0.003 5.79 (0.72–46.58)0.0992.17 (0.98–4.81)0.0570.85 (0.21–3.38)0.817
 Stage IIB6.11 (1.81–20.64) 0.003 3.65 (0.70–18.92)0.1242.04 (1.07–3.91) 0.031 0.91 (0.26–3.15)0.885
T stage
 Stage 1–21.00-1.00-
 Stage 3–42.22 (0.53–9.28)0.277--0.62 (0.15–2.53)0.502--
T stage
 Stage 11.00-1.00-
 Stage 21.23 (0.56–2.68)0.613-1.28 (0.77–2.12)0.338-
 Stage 32.59 (0.54–12.32)0.232--0.72 (0.17–3.07)0.657--
N stage
 N01.001.001.001.00
  ≥ N13.95 (1.88–8.30) 0.001 1.54 (0.35–6.91)0.5712.27 (1.38–3.73) 0.001 2.51 (0.74–8.43)0.138
Chemotherapy
 No1.00-
 Yes1.84 (0.92–3.69)0.084--
TKI treatment
 No1.00-
 Yes2.03 (0.79–5.26)0.144--
Surgery
 Lobectomy1.00-
 Wedge resection1.35 (0.53–3.45)0.536-
 Segmentectomy2.98 (0.40–22.31)0.288--

aTVGH: Taipei Veterans General Hospital; TCGA: The Cancer Genome Atlas

bCI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio. Bold values indicate statistical significance (p < 0.05)

cThe variables without significant HR in the univariate analysis were not included in the multivariate analysis

Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses of risk factors for cancer-related death in early-stage LUAD patients aTVGH: Taipei Veterans General Hospital; TCGA: The Cancer Genome Atlas bCI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio. Bold values indicate statistical significance (p < 0.05) cThe variables without significant HR in the univariate analysis were not included in the multivariate analysis To further define the prognostic effects of the eight-probe panel in early-stage LUAD patients, univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses were performed in the TCGA validation cohort of 299 early-stage LUAD patients. Univariate Cox regression analysis revealed that patients with the risk score > median of the eight-probe panel had poor outcome, with a relative risk of death of 1.66 (p = 0.038) (Table 3). However, the eight-probe panel showed a borderline significance by the multivariate analysis in the TCGA cohort.

Discussion

The incidence of LUAD is increasing worldwide [1]. Patients with the same stage of lung cancer may have different prognosis [22]. Development of prognostic markers is especially important in the patients with early-stage lung cancer, in whom clinical oncologists need selection factors to decide whether adjuvant therapy is necessary. In the present study, we develop a prognostic predictor panel for early-stage LUAD patients. This panel consists of eight DNA methylation probes corresponding to eight specific genes, including AGTRL1, ALDH1A3, BDKRB1, CTSE, EFNA2, NFAM1, SEMA4A, and TMEM129. The risk score calculated using the eight-probe panel served as an independent prognosis biomarker by Cox regression model and the multivariate analysis in our recruited patients. Therefore, the risk scores calculated from this eight-probe panel are valuable biomarkers for prognostic evaluation for early-stage LUAD patients to be tested in other cohorts. Recently, Heller et al. identified a total of 12 genes that were differentially methylated in tumors compared with surrounding tissues in stage I, II or III Caucasian non-small cell lung cancer patients. Among the 12 genes, only the methylation patterns of HOXA2 and HOXA10 were independent prognostic factors in lung squamous cell carcinoma patients [15]. In addition, Esteller and the associates used methylation array to establish methylation profiles of stage I Caucasian non-small cell lung cancer and identified that methylation of two or more genes in HIST1H4F, PCDHGB6, NPBWR1, ALX1, and HOXA9 correlated with an increased risk of cancer recurrence [16]. Interestingly, HOXA9 promoter methylation was associated with high risk in stage I LUAD patients of two independently cohorts by another study [23]. To date, all studies that have been executed in an attempt to find markers for clinical use do not include patients from different racial groups. In our study, the prognostic predictor panel comprising eight DNA methylation biomarkers was an independent risk factor of poor outcome in Asian LUAD patients. We further applied our risk score model to determine whether our finding could be validated in another cohort of 299 early-stage LUAD patients whose follow-up data were available in TCGA project. The new coefficient and hazard ratio were defined according to the methylation value of the eight probes given in TCGA database of these patients. The Kaplan-Meier overall survival analysis showed that TCGA patients with risk score greater than median value had a shorter MST compared with other patients (Fig. 4b). However, the result of multivariate Cox regression was only close to significance in the Caucasian LUAD patients (Table 3). One of the limitations of the current TCGA study is that we are unable to acquire the data on treatment or surgery performed on the TCGA patients (Table 1). We believe that these results could be improved after including data from more patients when they are available in TCGA dataset or by validating in other cohorts of Caucasian LUAD patients. The identification of the eight probes that can predict the clinical outcome in patients may reveal causes of the cancer development and tumorigenesis. For example, Angiotensin II receptor-like 1 (AGTRL1) and Bradykinin receptor B1 (BDKRB1) are G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). GPCRs, which represent by far the largest family of cell-surface molecules involved in signal transduction, have recently emerged as crucial players in tumor growth and metastasis [24]. AGTRL1 is Apelin receptor. Apelin is an angiogenic factor secreted by tumor cells in order to promote the formation of new vessels necessary for tumor growth [25]. In addition, crosstalk between BDKRB1 and EGFR has been shown to maintain tumor growth in the breast cancer [26]. Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family, member A3 (ALDH1A3) is the retinoic acid biosynthesis enzyme, and plays a major role in the detoxification of aldehydes generated by alcohol metabolism and lipid peroxidation. Promoter hypermethylation of ALDH1A3 has been reported to be a prognostic marker for lung cancer, gastric cancer, and invasive bladder cancer [27-30]. Cathepsin E (CTSE) prevents tumor growth and metastasis by catalyzing the proteolytic release of soluble trail from tumor cell surface [31]. Ephrin A2 (EFNA2), which belongs to ephrins family, regulates cell adhesion, motility, survival, proliferation, and differentiation. Semaphorins 4A (SEMA4A) suppresses endothelial cell migration and proliferation in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo mediated by vascular endothelial growth factor [32]. Further characterization of the probes validated in our panel could help to dissect the mechanism of LUAD tumorigenesis and progression. The advantages of our prognostic predictor panel are as follows. First, the methylation level of the eight probes could be analyzed by DNA methylation array or pyrosequencing in patients. Second, the stepwise multivariate Cox regression analysis, in which the coefficients were obtained for the selected eight probes, could generate the risk score equations specifically for the cohort of patients to be tested. Third, any newly recruited patients could be assigned into risk groups once the risk score equations are determined. Therefore, the prognostic predictor panel could calculate the risk score not only in the Asian but also in the Caucasian LUAD patients. However, some technical limitations such as sample collection and preprocessing as well as experimental procedures of DNA methylation array or pyrosequencing assay need to be controlled to avoid batch effects. In addition, clinical variables such as adjuvant therapy and surgical methods may affect outcome prediction. Large-scale, multicenter and prospective studies are necessary to validate our risk score model in early-stage LUAD patients.

Conclusions

Our study provides a proof-of-concept prognostic prediction panel consisting of eight methylated probes that are closely associated with survival in the early-stage LUAD patients. This prediction panel could be useful in stratifying patients according to the Cox-model and risk score before further treatment for early-stage LUAD patients who in dire need of intensive care.

Abbreviations

AGTRL1, Angiotensin II receptor-like 1; ALDH1A3, Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family member A3; BDKRB1, Bradykinin receptor B1; CI, confidence intervals; CTSE, Cathepsin E; EFNA2, Ephrin A2; HR, hazard ratio; LUAD, lung adenocarcinoma; MST, median survival time; NFAM1, NFAT activating protein with ITAM motif 1; SEMA4A, Semaphorin 4A; Superpc, supervised principal components; TCGA, the cancer genome atlas; TMEM129, Transmembrane protein 129; TVGH, Taipei Veterans General Hospital
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Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 15.609

5.  Cathepsin E prevents tumor growth and metastasis by catalyzing the proteolytic release of soluble TRAIL from tumor cell surface.

Authors:  Tomoyo Kawakubo; Kuniaki Okamoto; Jun-ichi Iwata; Masashi Shin; Yoshiko Okamoto; Atsushi Yasukochi; Keiichi I Nakayama; Tomoko Kadowaki; Takayuki Tsukuba; Kenji Yamamoto
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2007-11-15       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Differentiation of lung adenocarcinoma, pleural mesothelioma, and nonmalignant pulmonary tissues using DNA methylation profiles.

Authors:  Brock C Christensen; Carmen J Marsit; E Andres Houseman; John J Godleski; Jennifer L Longacker; Shichun Zheng; Ru-Fang Yeh; Margaret R Wrensch; Joseph L Wiemels; Margaret R Karagas; Raphael Bueno; David J Sugarbaker; Heather H Nelson; John K Wiencke; Karl T Kelsey
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2009-07-28       Impact factor: 12.701

Review 7.  DNA methylation data analysis and its application to cancer research.

Authors:  Xiaotu Ma; Yi-Wei Wang; Michael Q Zhang; Adi F Gazdar
Journal:  Epigenomics       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 4.778

8.  Semi-supervised methods to predict patient survival from gene expression data.

Authors:  Eric Bair; Robert Tibshirani
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2004-04-13       Impact factor: 8.029

9.  Absolute quantitation of DNA methylation of 28 candidate genes in prostate cancer using pyrosequencing.

Authors:  Nataša Vasiljević; Keqiang Wu; Adam R Brentnall; Dae Cheol Kim; Mangesh A Thorat; Sakunthala C Kudahetti; Xueying Mao; Liyan Xue; Yongwei Yu; Greg L Shaw; Luis Beltran; Yong-Jie Lu; Daniel M Berney; Jack Cuzick; Attila T Lorincz
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 3.434

10.  Factors associated with timeliness of post-primary care referral, diagnosis and treatment for lung cancer: population-based, data-linkage study.

Authors:  L F Forrest; J Adams; M White; G Rubin
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2014-09-09       Impact factor: 7.640

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  7 in total

1.  Identification of a methylomics-associated nomogram for predicting overall survival of stage I-II lung adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Heng Wang; Chuangye Wei; Peng Pan; Fengfeng Yuan; Jiancheng Cheng
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-11       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Individualized analysis reveals CpG sites with methylation aberrations in almost all lung adenocarcinoma tissues.

Authors:  Haidan Yan; Qingzhou Guan; Jun He; Yunqing Lin; Juan Zhang; Hongdong Li; Huaping Liu; Yunyan Gu; Zheng Guo; Fei He
Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2017-02-08       Impact factor: 5.531

3.  A Novel Prognostic Model of Early-Stage Lung Adenocarcinoma Integrating Methylation and Immune Biomarkers.

Authors:  Jin Ren; Yun Yang; Chuanyin Li; Lu Xie; Ronggui Hu; Xiong Qin; Menghuan Zhang
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-01-21       Impact factor: 4.599

4.  Molecular subtypes based on DNA promoter methylation predict prognosis in lung adenocarcinoma patients.

Authors:  Shanping Shi; Mingjun Xu; Yang Xi
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2020-11-24       Impact factor: 5.682

5.  DNA methylation molecular subtypes for prognosis prediction in lung adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Duoduo Xu; Cheng Li; Youjing Zhang; Jizhou Zhang
Journal:  BMC Pulm Med       Date:  2022-04-07       Impact factor: 3.317

6.  Early stage lung cancer: pathologist's perspective.

Authors:  Francesca Boggio; Alessandro Del Gobbo; Giorgio Croci; Marco Barella; Stefano Ferrero
Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 3.005

7.  DNA methylation profiling analysis identifies a DNA methylation signature for predicting prognosis and recurrence of lung adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Rui Wang; Hong Zhu; Mingxia Yang; Chunrong Zhu
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2019-09-30       Impact factor: 2.967

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