Single-cell RNA sequencing and multi-omics analysis of prognosis-related staging in papillary thyroid cancer

Abstract Background Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the most common thyroid cancer, but current molecular features inadequately stratify its risk. Whether distinct underlying mechanisms can further classify PTC and improve prognostic precision remains unclear. Methods We integrated single-cell RNA...

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Main Authors: Guo Ji, Hanlin Sun, Simo Chen, Xuechen Sun, Le Chang, Ruting Xie, Runzhi Huang, Lijun Zheng, Zhengyan Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-07-01
Series:Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-025-04101-4
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Summary:Abstract Background Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the most common thyroid cancer, but current molecular features inadequately stratify its risk. Whether distinct underlying mechanisms can further classify PTC and improve prognostic precision remains unclear. Methods We integrated single-cell RNA sequencing data (158,577 cells from 11 PTC patients; GEO: GSE184362) with bulk-RNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas Thyroid Carcinoma (TCGA-THCA) cohort (501 patients). Multi-omics analyses were employed to elucidate PTC heterogeneity, identify malignant cell differentiation and prognosis-related genes (MCD&PRGs), and construct a novel molecular classification, the Oncogenic Signature Of Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Classification (OSPTCC). A prognostic risk score was developed, and the classification's prognostic relevance was further explored in an independent institutional cohort using qRT-PCR. Results Single-cell analysis revealed three malignant cell differentiation states (PTC1-3) and a 34-gene signature (MCD&PRGs). This formed the basis of our Oncogenic Signature Of Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Classification (OSPTCC), defining three subtypes: Inflammation-associated (IPTCC), BRAF/autophagy-related (BAPTCC), and lipid metabolism-related (LPTCC). These subtypes showed distinct molecular profiles and significantly different progression-free survival (IPTCC poorest, P = 0.044). A 7-gene risk score derived from MCD&PRGs independently predicted prognosis (multivariate HR = 21.511, P < 0.001). qRT-PCR validation in an independent cohort (n = 48) using key markers (DEPTOR, APOE, APOC1) confirmed that OSPTCC-based risk stratification correlated with adverse clinical features, including higher recurrence rates in the high-risk group (P = 0.007). Conclusions This study introduces OSPTCC, a prognostically significant molecular classification for PTC based on tumor cell differentiation states. The identified subtypes, characterized by distinct biological mechanisms, provide deeper insights into PTC's molecular pathology and offer a framework for improved risk stratification and potential precision therapies.
ISSN:1432-0851