MALMPS: A Machine Learning‐Based Metabolic Gene Prognostic Signature for Stratifying Clinical Outcomes and Molecular Heterogeneity in Stage II/III Colorectal Cancer
Hao Chen, Ze Wang, Chenglong Sun, Yang Zhong, Yuan Liu, Yikun Li, Tongchao Zhang, Yuan Zhang, Xingyu Zhu, Leping Li, Feifei Teng, Ming‐Chi Lu, Wei Chong
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a frequently lethal disease, with stage II/III CRC accounting for ≈70%. Metabolic reprogramming plays a pivotal role in deciphering cancer heterogeneity and progression. Here, 9 datasets and 83 machine learning algorithm combinations are leveraged to develop the Machine Learning-based Metabolic gene Prognostic Signature (MALMPS) model. The MALMPS model outperformed traditional clinical traits and molecular features in predicting prognosis for stage II/III CRC patients across training and validation datasets. COX7B, a key gene in MALMPS, is shown to promote CRC malignancy through multi-omics analysis and in vitro assays. CRC patients are stratified into high- and low-risk groups based on the median cutoff of MALMPS. Notably, the high-risk subgroup exhibited poor prognosis, activated inflammation, and enriched carbohydrate, glycosaminoglycan, and lipid metabolism, with therapeutic potential for IGF-1R and Wnt/β-catenin inhibitor. In contrast, the low-risk group displayed a TGF-β pathway inactivating mutation and enriched in nucleotides, cofactors, and amino acids metabolism. Metabolite profiling in the in-house SDCRC dataset validated the distinct metabolic alterations between the two groups. These findings indicate that MALMPS is a valuable instrument for predicting the recurrence risk of stage II/III colorectal cancer, particularly for identifying individuals at high risk.