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M. Cypel
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MO01 - Lung Cancer Biology - Techniques and Platforms (ID 90)
- Event: WCLC 2013
- Type: Mini Oral Abstract Session
- Track: Biology
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:S. Lu, P. Waring
- Coordinates: 10/28/2013, 10:30 - 12:00, Bayside 204 A+B, Level 2
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MO01.09 - A novel murine xenograft model using samples obtained by EBUS-TBNA (ID 773)
11:10 - 11:15 | Author(s): M. Cypel
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background
Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) is a minimally invasive approach for lymph node staging in patients with lung cancer. Although EBUS-TBNA has been utilized for various molecular testing, intrinsic characteristics of different lesions produce variability in the amount of cellular material that can be obtained. In some samples, the quantity of tumor recovered may be limited for subsequent testing. To overcome this problem, we evaluated the feasibility of establishing a murine tumor xenograft model using EBUS-TBNA samples for advanced translational research.Methods
After confirmation of adequate sampling for cytopathological diagnosis during EBUS-TBNA, one additional pass was performed for this study (NCT01487603). The aspirate was stored in cell preservative solution (RPMI1640 with 10% FBS) for inoculation of the tumor for the xenograft model. The sample was transported to the laboratory on ice, then mixed with Matrigel and centrifuged. The pellet which contained tumor fragments was implanted to the subcutaneous pocket on the right flank of a NSG (NOD scid gamma) mouse. Once we confirmed the engraftment of the tumor, we passed the tumor to another mouse until 3 passages were completed. The success rate of tumor xenograft establishment was examined along with histopathology and the cellularity and cytopathologial diagnosis of the primary EBUS-TBNA samples.Results
From December 2011 to June 2012, 19 patients were enrolled in this study. The cytopathological diagnoses were as follows; 12 adenocarcinoma, 3 squamous cell carcinoma, 1 large cell carcinoma NOS, and 3 small cell carcinomas. 8 out of 19 cases (42.1%) showed tumor formation. The mean duration between inoculation and tumor formation was 62.38 days (13-144 days). All engrafted tumors could be passed to the second mouse. The histological types of the engrafted tumors were 3 adenocarcinoma (3/12: 25%), 2 squamous cell carcinoma (2/3: 67%), 1 large cell carcinoma (1/1: 100%), and 2 small cell carcinomas (2/3: 67%). The tumor cellularity of primary EBUS-TBNA samples was sufficient for diagnosis and there was no correlation between engraftment and the degree of blood/lymphocyte contamination or percentage of necrosis.Conclusion
EBUS-TBNA samples can be used for establishment of tumor xenograft model in immunodeficient mice. EBUS-TBNA allows minimally invasive sampling of metastatic lymph nodes in patients with advanced lung cancer which opens up possibilities for translational research. We need to continuously seek better ways to improve and standardize procurement and processing of samples obtained by minimally invasive techniques in order to optimize diagnosis and molecular analysis for improved patient care. Figure 1Only Members that have purchased this event or have registered via an access code will be able to view this content. To view this presentation, please login, select "Add to Cart" and proceed to checkout. If you would like to become a member of IASLC, please click here.
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P1.07 - Poster Session 1 - Surgery (ID 184)
- Event: WCLC 2013
- Type: Poster Session
- Track: Surgery
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 10/28/2013, 09:30 - 16:30, Exhibit Hall, Ground Level
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P1.07-026 - VATS reduces surgical risk of lobectomy for high risk patients with early non-small cell lung cancer (ID 2039)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): M. Cypel
- Abstract
Background
Patients considered to be at increased risk from surgery may be offered nonsurgical therapies for early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, video assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) is associated with lower morbidity and thus may permit anatomic resection for patients considered increased risk.Methods
Our institutional database was queried to find all patients who received lobectomy for early stage NSCLC between 2002-2010. Patients were grouped into cohorts of standard (SR, n=536) or increased risk (IR, n=72) using the ACOSOG Z4099/RTOG 1021 eligibility criteria. Morbidity and mortality were compared based on risk group and surgical method.Results
Median age was 72 and 67 years for IR and SR respectively. Most patients were stage I (IR: 83.3%; SR: 84.5%). Although IR patients had increased overall and pulmonary complications compared to SR (overall: p=0.0004; pulmonary: p<0.0001), there were no differences between the subset of IR patients who had VATS resections and SR patients resected by either open or VATS techniques (overall: p=0.7697; pulmonary: p=0.3219) [Table 1]. Survival at 5 years was significantly lower for IR patients resected by open techniques (46.2%; p=0.0028) but those resected by VATS (61.2%) had similar survival to SR patients resected by either VATS (65.1%) or open techniques (64.3%; p=0.83) [Figure 1]. There was no significant difference in operative mortality between the IR and SR groups (IR: 1.4%; SR: 0.4%; p=0.2832).Table 1: Post-operative complications stratified by risk subgroup and surgical method
Figure 1 Figure 1: Overall survival following lobectomy for NSCLC, stratified by risk group and surgical methodIncreased risk (%) Standard Risk (%) Increased Risk with VATS resection (%) Overall Complications 33.3 16.2 18.2 Pulmonary Complications 30.6 11.8 18.2 Conclusion
Surgical morbidity and mortality are reduced in patients at increased risk from lobectomy when resected by VATS offering them equivalent outcomes to standard risk patients.
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P1.22 - Poster Session 1 - Epidemiology, Etiology (ID 166)
- Event: WCLC 2013
- Type: Poster Session
- Track: Prevention & Epidemiology
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 10/28/2013, 09:30 - 16:30, Exhibit Hall, Ground Level
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P1.22-011 - Assessment of the accuracy and reliability of health related behavioural data obtained from patient-reported surveys (PRS) compared with electronic patient records (EPR) in lung cancer patient population (ID 2948)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): M. Cypel
- Abstract
Background
Cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption and presence of co morbidities are important factors that affect health status and mortality in patients diagnosed with lung cancer. While the gold standard for presence or absence of co-morbidities is EPR, the gold standard for obtaining accurate data pertaining to health-related behaviours is by PRS. The purpose of this study is to ascertain, whether in the absence of patient self-reported data, health related behavioural data pertaining to cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption abstracted from EPR provides an accurate and reliable surrogate.Methods
731 lung cancer patients completed a PRS pertaining to information on their lifetime tobacco use, alcohol consumption and whether or not they had been diagnosed with certain co-morbid conditions. Relevant smoking, alcohol consumption and co-morbidity data was collected independently from EPR. Kappa coefficient analysis was used to assess the agreement.Results
Results can be seen in Table 1. Ever/never status for smoking showed almost perfect agreement (k=0.95) between PRS and EPR and surpassed all other health behavioural measures and all co-morbidity agreement values. The calculation of pack-years from EPR and PRS showed substantial agreement (k=0.77); However, categorizing the smoking status into current/ former / never, resulted in only moderate agreement (k=0.47). Alcohol ever/ never status agreement was moderate (0.44) with high sensitivity (0.90) but low specificity (0.50). The lung related co-morbidities like emphysema (k=0.41) and chronic bronchitis (k=0.28) showed fair agreement but with substantial missing data through EPR.Table 1 Health Behaviour N Missing Data in EPR Agreement (k) 95% CI (P value) Se Sp Smoking (E/N) 709 0 0.95 (0.79, 0.89) 0.995 0.94 Smoking (Pkyrs)* 606 81(11%) 0.77 P<0.0001 Smoking (C/F/N)** 705 4(0.5%) 0.47 (0.41, 0.51) Alcohol (E/N) 575 150(20.5%) 0.44 (0.36, 0.52) 0.9 0.5 Comorbidity Emphysema 589 126(17.2%) 0.41 (0.33, 0.49) 0.41 0.95 Chronic Bronchitis 601 94(12.8%) 0.28 (0.19, 0.37) 0.39 0.88 *Spearman correlation coefficient **Weighted kappa Conclusion
In the absence of PRS data, EPR provides a reliable surrogate for ever/ never smoking status and moderately reliable for lifetime smoking exposure in this lung cancer population. However current/ former/ never smoking status and ever/ never alcohol status cannot be reliably ascertained from medical records. Missing EPR data related to smoking pack years, alcohol consumption and lung co-morbidities is concerning and suggests more systematic or synoptic reporting by physicians would improve opportunities for research
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P3.07 - Poster Session 3 - Surgery (ID 193)
- Event: WCLC 2013
- Type: Poster Session
- Track: Surgery
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 10/30/2013, 09:30 - 16:30, Exhibit Hall, Ground Level
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P3.07-038 - Long-term outcome after resection of non-small cell lung cancer invading the thoracic inlet (ID 2929)
09:30 - 09:30 | Author(s): M. Cypel
- Abstract
Background
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) of the thoracic inlet accounts for less than 5% of all lung cancers. Due to the lack of efficient treatment and the complexity of the anatomical structures commonly invaded, these tumors were deemed historically unresectable and fatal. In this study, we reviewed our surgical experience and long-term outcome after resection of NSCLC invading the thoracic inletMethods
All consecutive patients from a single center who underwent resection of NSCLC invading the thoracic inlet were reviewed with data retrieved retrospectively from the charts.Results
A total of 65 consecutive patients with a median age of 61 years (range 32 to 76) underwent resection of NSCLC invading the thoracic inlet from 1991 to 2011. Tumors were located in the previously described (Reference) five zones of the thoracic inlet as follows: zone 1 or anterolateral (n=5, 8%), zone 2 or anterocentral (n=7, 11%), zone 3 or posterosuperior (n=12, 18%), zone 4 or posteroinferior (n=22, 34%) and zone 5 or inferolateral (n=7, 11%). Fifty-two (80%) patients had induction therapy, mostly two cycles of cisplatin-etoposide and 45 Gy of concurrent radiation. All patients underwent en bloc resection of the lung and chest wall. Lobectomy was performed in 60 patients (92%). A median of three ribs were resected (range 1 to 5) and included the first rib in all patients. Twenty-four patients (37%) had an additional vertebral resection of up to five levels (median 3). Considering the most extended vertebral resection, total vertebrectomy with anterior-posterior spinal stabilization was required in 6 patients (25%), hemi-vertebrectomy with posterior spinal stabilization in 15 (62%), and partial vertebrectomy without stabilization in 3 (13%). Arterial resections were performed in seven patients (11%) and included subclavian artery (n=5), vertebral artery (n=1) and combination of sublclavian and carotid arteries (n=1).The median postoperative length of stay was 11 days (range 4 to 173). Postoperative morbidity and mortality were 46% and 6%, respectively. Pathologic response to induction treatment was complete (n=19) or near complete (n=12) in 31 patients (49%). Pathologic stages were 0 in 19 patients (29%), IB in 1 (2%), IIB in 28 (43%), IIIA in 15 (23%) and IIIB in 2 (3%) patients. After a median follow-up of 20 months (range 0 to 193), 34 patients were alive without recurrence. The overall 3- and 5-year survivals reached 58% and 52%, respectively. Results of the Cox regression and log-rank/Breslow tests identified the site of tumor (zone 1/3 vs 2/4/5, p=0.050) and the response rate to induction treatment (complete/near complete vs partial, p=0.004) as significant predictors of survivals. A trend toward shorter survival was found in case of arterial resection (p=0.063).Conclusion
Survival after resection of NSCLC invading the thoracic inlet in highly selected patients reached 52% after five years. Tumor location within the thoracic inlet and pathologic response to induction therapy were significant predictors of survivals. Reference: de Perrot M, Rampersaud R. Surgical approaches to apical thoracic malignancies. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2012 Jul;144(1):72-80.