Breakthrough Study: Lactate Metabolism Identified as Key to Esophageal Cancer Prognosis and Treatment

July 5, 2025
Breakthrough Study: Lactate Metabolism Identified as Key to Esophageal Cancer Prognosis and Treatment
  • To enhance diagnostic capabilities, machine learning techniques such as LASSO, random forest, and SVM-RFE were employed, identifying six hub genes (SLC16A7, GFM1, PDP1, KIF23, TRMT5, COX5A) with strong potential for distinguishing ESCC from normal samples.

  • Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is a highly aggressive cancer with a low five-year survival rate below 20%, emphasizing the urgent need for effective diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

  • In 2022, there were approximately 511,054 new cases of esophageal cancer worldwide, resulting in 445,391 related deaths, further highlighting the critical demand for advancements in treatment.

  • The study also constructed a nomogram based on these hub genes, demonstrating high predictive accuracy for ESCC risk assessment, achieving an AUC value of 0.982 in the GLM model.

  • These findings underscore the importance of lactate metabolism in ESCC and highlight the potential of LRGs as biomarkers and targets for novel therapeutic strategies.

  • A recent study has focused on lactate metabolism in ESCC, identifying lactate-related genes (LRGs) as potential biomarkers for prognosis and treatment due to their significant impact on the tumor microenvironment and immune response.

  • Through bioinformatics analysis, researchers identified a total of 212 LRGs, revealing their association with cancer progression and immune profiles in ESCC patients.

  • Differential expression analysis of ESCC samples uncovered 1,377 differentially expressed genes (DEGs), leading to the identification of 13 lactate-related DEGs that could serve as potential biomarkers.

  • Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis characterized the cellular composition of ESCC samples, highlighting distinct immune cell interactions and higher lactylation scores in ESCC cells compared to normal cells.

  • Immune infiltration analysis indicated significant differences in immune cell types between ESCC and normal samples, suggesting that lactate metabolism plays a crucial role in shaping the immune landscape of the tumor environment.

Summary based on 1 source


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