Establishing an EGFR mutation screening service for non-small cell lung cancer - sample quality criteria and candidate histological predictors.


Autoria(s): Leary, A.F.; Castro, D.G.; Nicholson, A.G.; Ashley, S.; Wotherspoon, A.; O'Brien, M.E.; Popat, S.
Data(s)

01/01/2012

Resumo

INTRODUCTION: EGFR screening requires good quality tissue, sensitivity and turn-around time (TAT). We report our experience of routine screening, describing sample type, TAT, specimen quality (cellularity and DNA yield), histopathological description, mutation result and clinical outcome. METHODS: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) sections were screened for EGFR mutations (M+) in exons 18-21. Clinical, pathological and screening outcome data were collected for year 1 of testing. Screening outcome alone was collected for year 2. RESULTS: In year 1, 152 samples were tested, most (72%) were diagnostic. TAT was 4.9 days (95%confidence interval (CI)=4.5-5.5). EGFR-M+ prevalence was 11% and higher (20%) among never-smoking women with adenocarcinomas (ADCs), but 30% of mutations occurred in current/ex-smoking men. EGFR-M+ tumours were non-mucinous ADCs and 100% thyroid transcription factor (TTF1+). No mutations were detected in poorly differentiated NSCLC-not otherwise specified (NOS). There was a trend for improved overall survival (OS) among EGFR-M+ versus EGFR-M- patients (median OS=78 versus 17 months). In year 1, test failure rate was 19%, and associated with scant cellularity and low DNA concentrations. However 75% of samples with poor cellularity but representative of tumour were informative and mutation prevalence was 9%. In year 2, 755 samples were tested; mutation prevalence was 13% and test failure only 5.4%. Although samples with low DNA concentration (2.2 ng/μL), the mutation rate was 9.2%. CONCLUSION: Routine epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) screening using diagnostic samples is fast and feasible even on samples with poor cellularity and DNA content. Mutations tend to occur in better-differentiated non-mucinous TTF1+ ADCs. Whether these histological criteria may be useful to select patients for EGFR testing merits further investigation.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/establishing-an-egfr-mutation-screening-service-for-nonsmall-cell-lung-cancer--sample-quality-criteria-and-candidate-histological-predictors(cac67bc2-aef5-44dd-8cea-eb113956ae6a).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2011.09.022

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Leary , A F , Castro , D G , Nicholson , A G , Ashley , S , Wotherspoon , A , O'Brien , M E & Popat , S 2012 , ' Establishing an EGFR mutation screening service for non-small cell lung cancer - sample quality criteria and candidate histological predictors. ' European Journal of Cancer , vol 48 , no. 1 , pp. 61-67 . DOI: 10.1016/j.ejca.2011.09.022

Palavras-Chave #Algorithms #Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung #DNA Mutational Analysis #Feasibility Studies #Female #Gene Frequency #Genes, erbB-1 #Genetic Testing #Humans #Lung Neoplasms #Male #Mutation, Missense #Prognosis #Quality Control #Risk Factors #Specimen Handling
Tipo

article