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WCLC 2016
17th World Conference on Lung Cancer
Access to all presentations that occur during the 17th World Conference on Lung Cancer in Vienna, Austria
Presentation Date(s):- Dec 4 - 7, 2016
- Total Presentations: 2466
To review abstracts of the presentations below, narrow down your search by using the Filter options below, and then select the session listing of your choice. Click the "+" for a presentation to expand & view the corresponding Abstract details.
Presentations will be available 24 hours after their live presentation time
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OA06 - Prognostic & Predictive Biomarkers (ID 452)
- Type: Oral Session
- Track: Biology/Pathology
- Presentations: 8
- Moderators:F. Shepherd, Y. Yatabe
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:20 - 15:50, Strauss 1
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OA06.01 - Clinical Utility of Circulating Tumor DNA (ctDNA) Analysis by Digital next Generation Sequencing of over 5,000 Advanced NSCLC Patients (ID 6096)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): P. Mack, K.C. Banks, J.W. Riess, O.A. Zill, S.A. Mortimer, D.I. Chudova, J. Odegaard, C.E. Lee, R.J. Nagy, H. Eltoukhy, A. Talasaz, R.B. Lanman, D.R. Gandara
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Detection of actionable genomic alterations is now required for NCCN guideline-compliant work-up of NSCLC adenocarcinoma. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of ctDNA, if sufficiently sensitive and specific, could provide a non-invasive, comprehensive genotyping platform relevant to clinical decision-making when tissue is insufficient or at time of progression on targeted therapies.
Methods:
A highly accurate, deep-coverage (15,000x) ctDNA plasma NGS test targeting 54-70 genes (Guardant360) was used to genotype 5,206 advanced-stage NSCLC patients accrued between 6/2014 – 4/2016. The frequency and distribution of somatic alterations in key genes were compared to those described in TCGA (Pearson and Spearman correlations). The clinical impact of ctDNA testing was evaluated by identification of resistance mechanisms emergent at progression on targeted therapies, and through analysis of additional driver mutations detected by ctDNA at baseline in 362 consecutive NSCLC patients with tissue mutation data available. The positive predictive value (PPV) of ctDNA sequencing was assessed in 229 patients with known tumor driver alterations.
Results:
ctDNA alterations were detected in 86% of cases; EGFR mutations in 25%, KRAS mutations in 17%, MET amplification in 4%, BRAF mutations in 3% and other rare but potentially actionable alterations in 9%. Mutation patterns among driver oncogenes were highly consistent with those from TCGA (Pearson r=0.92, 0.99, 0.99 for EGFR, KRAS, and fusion breakpoint location). PPV of ctDNA-detected variants was 100% for EGFR[L858R], 98% for EGFR[E19del], 96% for ALK, RET, or ROS1 fusions, and 100% for KRAS[G12/G13/Q61] mutations. In 362 cases with tissue information available, 63% (229/362) were tissue quantity-insufficient or undergenotyped (QNS/UG). ctDNA analysis identified driver mutations in 51 of the 229 QNS/UG cases, a 38% increase in detection rate over tissue alone. Among 1,111 EGFR-mutant cases, resistance mutations were identified at progression at frequencies consistent with published literature: EGFR[T790M] 47%, MET amp 5%, ERBB2 amp 5%, FGFR3 fusions 0.4%, ALK/other fusions 1%, BRAF mutations 1.8%, PTEN inactivation 2.5%, NF1 inactivation 3%, RB1 inactivation 3%, KRAS mutations 1.9%. In 143 consecutive NSCLC patients with detailed follow-up and serial analysis seen at the UC Davis Cancer Center, informative driver mutations were observed in 48 (34%).
Conclusion:
This series represents the largest NSCLC ctDNA study to date. Genotypic patterns of truncal mutations were highly consistent with TCGA in terms of frequency and distribution. At baseline, ctDNA augmented tissue analysis by identifying additional, actionable mutations when tissue was QNS/UG. ctDNA NGS conducted at progression identified emergent resistance mutations that could inform subsequent courses of therapy.
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OA06.02 - Mutational Load Predicts Survival in LDCT Screening-Detected Lung Cancers (ID 5577)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): G. Sozzi, C. Verri, C. Borzi, T. Holscher, M. Dugo, A. Devecchi, K. Drake, S. Sestini, P. Suatoni, E. Romeo, M. Boeri, U. Pastorino
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
The issue of overdiagnosis in low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening trials for lung cancer has to be addressed by the development of complementary biomarkers able to improve detection of aggressive disease. We previously identified a 24 plasma miRNA signature endowed with good performance in terms of sensitivity and specificity in subjects enrolled in independent LDCT screening trials. However, the relationship between circulating miRNAs in plasma and the molecular heterogeneity of the patients’ tumors needs to be considered. Linking tumor genomics to circulating miRNA profiles represent an attractive approach. In fact a plasma miRNA assay able to classify molecular subclasses of tumors could constitute a sort of “liquid biopsy” endowed with not only diagnostic but also prognostic and, potentially, therapeutic value.
Methods:
We evaluated the mutation profile by targeted Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) analysis (Cancer Hotspot Panel v.2) in 94 Low Dose Computed Tomography (LDCT) screening-detected lung tumors resected from subjects participating in 3 screening trials for lung cancer. Mutation profile was associated with clinicopathologic, survival features and with a plasma MSC risk level of patients. The mutational profile obtained was compared with the mutations of a selected dataset of clinically detected lung tumors through The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
Results:
We showed alterations in the main genetic drivers in 79% of screening lung tumors whereas 21% of tumor samples had no alteration within these amplicons. Significant associations between TP53, squamous histology and smoking intensity as well as KRAS mutations with worse OS were detected. EGFR alterations were present in 4 tumors from heavy smokers. The 5-year overall survival (OS) of screening patients with and without mutations in the tumors was 64% and 100%, respectively (p=0.019). By combining the mutational status with the MSC risk profile, patients were stratified into 3 groups with 5-year OS ranging from 41% to 96% (p<0.0001) and the prognostic value was significant even when controlling for stage (p=0.017). A similar mutational profile and mutation frequency was observed in screening- and in clinical (TCGA) tumors, whereas difference in 5-year OS between subjects with and without mutations was exclusively detected in screening patients.
Conclusion:
The mutation profile of screening-detected tumors, while similar to that of clinically-detected tumors, was a strong predictor of OS. The combination of tumor mutational status with a circulating miRNA-based risk classifier predicts tumor aggressiveness and clinical outcome and may find rapid application in LDCT screening programs by reducing the number of unnecessary interventions and helping plan targeted treatment
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OA06.03 - Transcriptome Analysis of ATM-Deficient NSCLC (ID 6196)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): L.F. Petersen, E. Enwere, M. Konno, O. Kovalchuk, D..G. Bebb
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Current targeted therapy options in lung cancer, such as EGFR and ALK inhibitors, are effective, though limited in use by the low percentage of patients that carry targetable mutations for these biomarkers. Targeting a broader biological process like DNA damage response (DDR), as with recent synthetic lethality exploits in BRCA-deficient tumours, may offer a form of precision therapy for a larger number of patients. We have shown that NSCLC cells deficient in the DDR protein ATM, exhibit similar synthetic lethality when treated with a PARP1 inhibitor, and that NSCLC patients lacking detectable ATM have poorer overall survival. In vitro, ATM deficient, or “ATMic” cells show increased sensitivity to chemotherapeutics at much lower levels when given in combination with PARP inhibitor. This data suggests that ATM status may be an important determinant for treatment modalities including low dose radiation or platin therapy, or novel synthetic lethality therapies. Here, we seek to determine the cause of ATM loss in NSCLC patients through targeted sequencing, and thorough transcriptomic and epigenetic analysis.
Methods:
We perform whole-transcriptome analysis on NSCLC patient samples previously characterized as normal or ATMic, to detect differences in intracellular pathway activation in these tumours. Additional analysis using OncoFinder software identifies possible effective therapies based on which signalling pathways are most active in the normal or ATMic patients. We also perform targeted NGS on these samples. To our knowledge, no sequencing of ATM has been performed on samples that have also been characterized through other methods (i.e. quantitative IHC) to be ATM deficient.
Results:
We have generated a substantial body of evidence showing that ATM loss has significant impact on the cell sensitivity to several therapeutic modalites. As such ATMic tumours may be treated more effectively using specific treatment strategies than their ATM competent counterparts. Initial analysis of NSCLC cell lines using the outlined methodologies distinguishes ATM status and identifies different therapeutic agents based on inherent molecular differences. A complete analysis of the transcriptome profiles of ATMic NSCLC patients will be presented and discussed.
Conclusion:
This research helps complete the overall picture of what the therapeutic implications of ATM loss in NSCLC actually are and how ATMic tumours can best be identified in the clinic. Together, these analyses will give us a stronger understanding of the mechanism for ATM loss in NSCLC, as well as allow us to develop an ATMic “signature” for reliably determining ATM status in patients for directing their treatment options.
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OA06.04 - Discussant for OA06.01, OA06.02, OA06.03 (ID 6962)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): R. Soo
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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OA06.05 - Proteomic Analysis of ERCC1 Predicts Benefit of Platinum Therapy in NSCLC: A Reevaluation of Samples from the TASTE Trial (ID 5361)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): J. Soria, K. Olaussen, F. Cecchi, E. An, C. Yau, M. Wislez, G. Zalcman, D. Moro-Sibilot, D. Perol, B. Besse, F. Morin, T. Hembrough
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
It is hypothesized that low or absent expression of the excision repair cross-complementation group 1 (ERCC1) protein predicts improved survival in NSCLC patients treated with platinum-based therapy. However, the International Adjuvant Lung Cancer Trial Collaborative Group concluded that current ERCC1 assessment methods are inadequate for clinical decision-making. Due to the unreliability of ERCC1 immunohistochemistry (IHC), the IFCT-0801 TASTE (Tailored Postsurgical Therapy in Early-Stage NSCLC) trial of adjuvant therapy for NSCLC was discontinued. We reevaluated a subset of samples from the TASTE trial using mass spectrometry-based proteomics to quantitate ERCC1 protein. We correlated ERCC1 proteomic status with survival after chemotherapy with cisplatin/pemetrexed and compared it to ERCC1 IHC ranking.
Methods:
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded NSCLC tumor tissues were laser microdissected, solubilized, digested, and proteomically analyzed. A multiplexed, selected reaction monitoring mass spectrometric assay was used to quantitate levels of multiple proteins including ERCC1. The Kaplan-Meier method and univariate Cox analysis assessed overall survival (OS) and relapse-free survival (RFS). A chi-squared test compared binary proteomic levels of ERCC1 (detectable vs. undetectable) with the IHC status assessed using an anti-ERCC1 antibody (8F1) during the TASTE trial.
Results:
Of 146 evaluable patients, 33 (22.6%) had undetectable ERCC1 by quantitative proteomics. Proteomics found no detectable ERCC1 protein in 8/36 (22.2%) IHC-positive patients nor in 8/22 (19.3%) IHC-indeterminate patients. ERCC1 was detected in 71/88 (80.7%) IHC-negative patients (range: 36-137 amol/µg total tumor protein). Undetectable ERCC1 by proteomics was prognostic of OS (hazard ratio [HR]: 5.45; p=0.031). In survival analyses of cisplatin-treated patients (n=122), only one of the 15 deaths occurred among the patients with undetectable ERCC1 protein. These patients had better OS than cisplatin-treated patients with detectable ERCC1, although the difference statistically nonsignificant (HR: 3.98; p=0.102). RFS was similar between patients with and without detectable ERCC1. GARFT protein (predictive of response to pemetrexed) was quantified in 100% of patients (range: 492-4006 amol/µg). The 10 cisplatin/pemetrexed-treated patients with GARFT levels >900 amol/µg had nonsignificantly worse OS than their counterparts with lower GARFT levels (p=0.08).
Conclusion:
Although underpowered to detect statistically significant survival differences, this study clearly demonstrates that quantitative proteomics can increase accuracy in identifying NSCLC patients who will respond to platinum-based therapy because they do not express ERCC1. Approximately 28% of such patients were misclassified by ERCC1 IHC in the TASTE trial. Clinicians should be aware that multiplexed quantitative proteomics can quantitate ERCC1 simultaneously with multiple clinically relevant proteins in lung tumors and small biopsies.
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OA06.06 - Druggable Alterations Involving Crucial Carcinogenesis Pathways Drive the Prognosis of Squamous Cell Lung Carcinoma (SqCLC) (ID 5342)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): S. Pilotto, M. Simbolo, I. Sperduti, S. Novello, C. Vicentini, U. Peretti, S. Pedron, R. Ferrara, M. Caccese, M. Milella, A. Mafficini, P. Visca, M. Volante, F. Facciolo, A. Santo, L. Carbognin, M. Brunelli, M. Chilosi, A. Scarpa, G. Tortora, E. Bria
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
We previously built and validated a risk classification model for resected SqCLC by combining clinicopathological predictors to discriminate patients’ (pts) prognosis (Pilotto JTO 2015). Here we (AIRCMFAG project no. 14282) investigate the molecular portrait of prognostic outliers to identify differentially expressed, potentially druggable alterations.
Methods:
Based on the published 3-class model, 176 and 46 pts with good and bad prognosis, respectively, were identified. Somatic Mutations (SM) and Copy Number Alterations (CNA) were evaluated with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) for 59 genes (Ion Proton system, Ion Ampliseq custom panel). Moreover, RNA expression assays, immunohistochemistry (IHC) and immunofluorescence (FISH) were performed. Descriptive statistic was adopted and continuous variables were dichotomized according to AUC or medians.
Results:
Herein, the analysis of 60 pts (good/poor 27/33) is reported. In the overall population, the median rate of SM (3.3%) is lower compared to the median rate of CNA (28.3%), without significant differences between the two prognostic groups. The most frequent SM resulted to be missense (66.7%) and nonsense (20.3%) mutations, whereas the copy number gain is the most common CNA (76.7%), The distribution of relevant alterations in the main carcinogenesis pathways in term of SM, CNA and expression (by RNA, IHC and FISH), according to the prognostic subgroups, are reported in the table.Pathway Gene [method] Good [%] Poor [%] p-value Squamous differentiation SOX [CNA] 74.1 51.5 0.11 TP63 [CNA] 37.0 21.2 0.25 Epithelial to mesenchymal transition SNAI1 [RNA] 59.2 90.9 0.006 Vimentin [RNA] 44.4 69.7 0.07 mTOR PI3KCA [SM] 0 9.0 0.24 RICTOR [CNA] 3.7 27.3 0.017 p-mTOR [IHC] 11.1 18.1 0.5 Tyrosine kinase receptors DDR2 [SM] 11.1 0 0.085 FSR2 [CNA] 3.7 18.1 0.12 MET [FISH] 11.1 24.2 0.32 FGFR3 [FISH] 25.9 42.4 0.28 Cell cycle regulators CDKN2A [CNA] 22.2 3.0 0.38 SMAD4 [CNA] 33.3 57.6 0.074 Immune checkpoints PD-L1 [IHC] 18.5 6.1 0.23 PD-1 [RNA] 51.8 93.9 <0.0001
Conclusion:
Although performed on a limited number of pts, such comprehensive analysis of DNA, RNA and proteins, using different methodologies, is feasible and allow identifying potentially druggable prognostic modulators, such as RICTOR/PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway. The possibility to inhibit this pathway with selective agents is currently under investigation in in vitro preclinical models.
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- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Veliparib is a potent poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP)-1 and PARP-2 inhibitor that has synthetic lethality interaction with cancers harboring homologous recombination deficiency. In preclinical models, it has also been shown to delay the repair of DNA damage induced by chemotherapeutics (platinum, alkylators, topoisomerase inhibitors). Clinically meaningful improvements in progression-free survival and overall survival were observed in a phase 2 trial of veliparib with carboplatin/paclitaxel in previously untreated metastatic or advanced NSCLC (M10-898 study). Intriguingly, smoking history had a major impact on veliparib effect—smokers benefited most from veliparib addition. The underlying mechanism for this observation remains unclear. The efficacy benefit of veliparib in smokers is not dependent on tobacco exposure during study treatment, but correlates with the duration of smoking history, suggesting a genetic basis.
Methods:
Genomic signatures in NSCLC associated with smoking status have been identified by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Lung Cancer Project. Relevant observations were leveraged in the reported analysis. To comprehensively identify genes or genomic features that are associated with smoking status and veliparib response, patient tumor samples from the M10-898 trial were subjected to whole-exome (N = 38) and RNA sequencing (N = 75) analysis. Alexandrov somatic mutational signature was calculated from exome sequencing data.
Results:
Data from TCGA show that cancer genomes in smokers harbor significantly more genetic alterations than those in non-smokers. These alterations include high mutational burden, high C>A transversion, high mutation frequency of key cancer genes (particularly TP53), and high homologous recombination defect signature. Similar observations were confirmed in the M10-898 study. Of the 38 patients with exome data, 26 were determined to be positive for a smoking-related signature—signature 4. Elevated mutational burden was observed among current and former smokers, with a mean of 199 somatic mutations in current or former smokers vs 60 in never-smokers (p = 0.004). The small sample size of our genomic cohort nevertheless precludes conclusive association of genomic signatures and veliparib benefits.
Conclusion:
Cancer genomes in smokers are enriched with genetic alterations associated with poor outcome using standard chemotherapy, as well as with vulnerability factors that can prime tumors to respond to veliparib. For further validation, a targeted sequencing assay to detect key DNA damage and repair genes as well as key genomic signatures has been established and will be used in all phase 3 veliparib trials.
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OA06.08 - Discussant for OA06.05, OA06.06, OA06.07 (ID 7006)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): M. Gottfried
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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OA07 - Lymph Node Metastases and Other Prognostic Factors for Local Spread (ID 376)
- Type: Oral Session
- Track: Surgery
- Presentations: 7
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OA07.01 - Incidence, Local Distribution and Impact of pN2 Skip Metastasis in Patients Undergoing Curative Resection for NSCLC (ID 4177)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): A. Steindl, S. Tahon, M. Nguyen, B. Dome, V. Laszlo, W. Klepetko, M.A. Hoda, T. Klikovits
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Background: The presence of N2 lymph node (LN) involvement has strong impact on therapy and prognosis in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). N2 LN metastasis may occur by skipping N1 LN stations (N2skip-met). We aim to analyze incidence, local distribution and impact of N2skip-mets in a large cohort of patients undergoing curative resection for NSCLC.
Methods:
Methods: A retrospective non-interventional singe-center cohort study was conducted, assessing all patients undergoing curative resection for NSCLC between 2006 and 2013 at our institution by reviewing medical charts. Incidence of N2skip-mets among these patients was the primary endpoint. Subsequent secondary correlation of clinical parameters was performed using uni- and multivariate logistic and cox regression models.
Results:
Results: In total, 1110 patients were enrolled, with the following pathological LN status: 789 (71%) pN0, 211 (19%) pN1, 105 (9.5%) pN2, 5 (0.5%) pN3. Histological subtype was: adenocarcinoma, n=675 (61%); squamous cell carcinoma, n=309 (28%); other, n=126 (11%). Incidence of N2skip was 55% (47/105). N2skip-mets occurred more frequently in right sided tumors (odds ratio (OR) 2.14, p=0.058) and patients with adenocarcinoma (vs. other, OR 1.54, p=0.19). Presence of N2skip-mets did not correlate with tumor size (ROC, area under curve (AUC) 0.44, p=0.32). Strikingly, presence of N2skip-mets was significantly increased in smokers (OR 3.5, 95% CI 1.38-8.83, p=0.006). Moreover, patients with N2skip-mets were more likely to develop subsequent brain mets (OR 4.13, p=0.06). Overall- and recurrence free survival will be presented at the conference.
Conclusion:
Conclusion: N2skip-mets occur in a high number of patients with N2 disease, with distinct differences in clinicopathologic features. Considering the results of this study, subclassification of N2 disease as recently proposed by the IASLC may have clinical impact in patients with resectable NSCLC.
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- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Clinical practice involving segmental nodes (No.13) and subsegmental nodes (No.14) retrieval for pathological examination varies during lung cancer surgery. This study aims to evaluate whether omitting No.13 and No.14 node retrieval could lead to an inferior oncological outcome for pN0 non-small cell lung cancer(NSCLC)patients.
Methods:
This retrospective study analyzed 442 cases of NSCLC, both treating with R0 resection and systematic mediastinal lymphadenectomy and confirming as pN0 on postoperative pathology. Study group defined cases whose N1 nodes investigation involving from No.10 to No.14 in pathological report. In Control group, N1 nodes investigation only include No.10 to No.12. Clinical and pathological parameters of above two groups were balanced by propensity score matching based on surgical quality and the oncological outcomes between two groups were assessed by log-rank test.
Results:
Seven cases were lost during follow up and 435 cases entered final analysis (Study group, n=170 vs. Control group, n=265). A total of 5.0±3.0 nodes per case were collected from No. 13 and No. 14 in Study group, which included 3.1±1.9 nodes of No. 13 and 2.0±2.2 of No. 14. Tumor-located segments harbored 2.8±2.2 lymph nodes, compared to 2.2±2.3 from non-tumor located segments (p=0.006). After propensity score matching, 143 cases remained in each group. Overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) were improved in Study group compared with Control group (the 5-year OS rates, 89±3% vs. 77±4%, p=0.027; the 5-year DFS rates, 81±4% vs. 67±4%, p=0.021, Figure1A,1B). In multivariate analysis, T staging and performing intrapulmonary nodes collection were the prognostic factors for pN0 cases. For the whole cohort, patients with two intrapulmonary stations collected showed better survival than those with zero intrapulmonary station retrieved(Figure1C, 1D).
Conclusion:
Inferior oncological outcomes of pN0 cases without intrapulmonary node retrieval suggests this procedure may play a role in outcome evaluation for pN0 NSCLC patients.
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OA07.03 - Prognostic Significance of Micrometastases in Mediastinal Lymph Nodes of Patients With Radically Resected Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 5060)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): P. Gwóźdź, M. Pasieka-Lis, K. Kołodziej, J. Pankowski, M. Zieliński
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Recurrence occurs in 30-50 % of patients operated for early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), what suggests the existence of occult metastases at the time of surgery. Preoperative detection of occult micrometastases in mediastinal lymph nodes could contribute to better selection of patients apropriate for surgery. This retrospective study was undertaken to determine the prognostic significance of preoperatively detected mediastinal lymph node (LN) micrometastases in patients treated with radical surgical resection for stage I and II NSCLC.
Methods:
From January 2007 to December 2010, 82 patients with stage I and 67 patients with stage II NSCLC underwent transcervical extended mediastinal lymphadenectomy (TEMLA) and subsequent radical pulmonary resection. A total of 4841 mediastinal lymph nodes resected during TEMLA procedure and determined as metastases-free by hematoxylin and eosin staining were labelled to detect occult micrometastases (dual immunohistochemical staining with AE1/AE3 and BerEP4 antibodies).
Results:
Micrometastases were detected in mediastinal LN of 16 patients (9,7%). 11 patients had only one LN station affected (68,8%). Subcarinal LN were most frequently affected station (11 patients, 68,8%). There was significant correlation between the presence of micrometastases and tumor size. 5-year total survival was significantly better for stage I (64,1%, p=0.0001) and stage II (44,4%, p<0.05) patients without micrometastases comparing to those with micrometastases (18,8%). By multivariate analysis, only the presence of micrometastases was demonstrated to be a significant prognostic factor for 5-year total survival.
Conclusion:
Presence of micrometastases in mediastinal LN of patients with radically resected stage I and II NSCL is associated with significantly reduced 5-year total survival. Preoprative detection of micrometastases with immunohistochemical staining of mediastinal LN resected during TEMLA procedure improves staging and may contribute to better patient selection for curative surgery.
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OA07.04 - Discussant for OA07.01, OA07.02, OA07.03 (ID 7075)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): Y.-. Wu
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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OA07.05 - Prognostic Impact of Pleural Lavage Cytology (PLC): Significance of PLC after Lung Resection (ID 5801)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): S. Katsumata, J. Yoshida, G. Ishii, K. Sekihara, T. Miyoshi, K. Aokage, T. Hishida, M. Tsuboi
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
We previously reported the prognostic significance of pleural lavage cytology (PLC) in patients undergoing surgery for non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Based on a larger cohort of more than 3500 NSCLC patients, which is the largest ever reported from a single institution in the literature, we evaluated the prognostic impact of PLC on survival and recurrence.
Methods:
From January 1993 to July 2015, 3671 patients underwent R0 surgical resection for NSCLC at our institution and PLC results before (pre-) and after (post-) lung resection were both available. The cytological evaluation was classified into 3 categories: negative (-), suggestive (±), positive (+). We excluded 77 patients whose PLC results were suggestive, and 3594 patients were analyzed. The impact of PLC results on survival and recurrence was evaluated with conventional clinicopathological factors.
Results:
The overall survival (OS) of pre-PLC (+) patients was significantly inferior to that of pre-PLC (-) patients. However, the 5-year OS rate of pre-PLC (+) patients was 43%, which was significantly better than that of patients with pleural dissemination (11%). In the following analyses, we divided the patients into 3 groups according to pre/post- PLC results as follows: Pre (-)/ post (-), Group A (n=3461); pre (+)/ post (-), Group B (n=43); and post (+), Group C (n=87). Statistically significant difference was not observed between Groups A and B in OS or in recurrence-free survival (RFS) (p=1.00, 0.28, respectively). However, there were significant differences in OS and RFS between Groups B and C (p=0.01 and p=0.02), and between Groups A and C (p<0.01 and p<0.01), respectively. In univariate and multivariate analyses of clinicopathological factors including post-PLC results to identify prognosticators for OS, post-PLC(+) (hazard ratio (HR) =2.20, p<0.01), older age (≥65 years; HR=1.95, p<0.01), smoking history (+) (HR=1.48, p<0.01), elevated serum CEA level (>5.0 mg/dL; HR=1.28, p<0.01), pathological(p)T≥2 (HR=1.28, p<0.01), pN≥1 (HR=1.48, p<0.01), pStage≥II (HR=1.51, p<0.01), pl(+) (HR=1.43, p<0.01), ly(+) (HR=1.32, p<0.01), and v(+) (HR=1.53, p<0.01) were found to be significant independent unfavorable prognosticators.
Conclusion:
The prognostic impact of pre-PLC was moderate and not prohibiting lung resection. Post-PLC was shown to be a strong independent prognostic factor. Its impact on survival of NSCLC patients was very strong, and therefore should be incorporated in the future TNM classification.
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OA07.06 - In Early-Stage Lung Adenocarcinomas, Survival by Tumor Size (T) is Further Stratified by Tumor Spread through Air Spaces (ID 5905)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): T. Eguchi, K. Kameda, S. Lu, M. Bott, K.S. Tan, D. Jones, W.D. Travis, P.S. Adusumilli
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
We investigated whether tumor spread through air spaces (STAS) further stratifies survival beyond tumor size, T-descriptor independent of resection type (lobectomy or limited resection) and surgical margin.
Methods:
In patients with pT1a-T2bN0M0 lung adenocarcinomas (LADC, n=1399), tumor size, distance of STAS from the tumor, type of resection, surgical margin were evaluated. The patients with small (≤2cm) tumors were divided into STAS(-) (n=561) and STAS(+) (n=307) and their cumulative incidence of recurrence (CIR), and lung cancer-specific death (CID) were compared with patients with larger tumors (2-3cm, n=299) by use of competing risk analysis.
Results:
Of 1399 tumors, 521 (37%) were STAS(+). Compared to STAS(-), recurrence rates were higher with STAS(+) tumors even when the margin is ≥tumor size (Figure 1). In patients with ≤2cm STAS(+) tumors, CIR and CID are higher than in patients with larger (2-3cm) tumors (Figure 2). The poor prognostic influence of STAS(+) was evident even when analyzed by the procedure or recurrence pattern (Figure 2 table).
Conclusion:
STAS further stratifies survival beyond tumor size, T-descriptor in early-stage (pT1a-2b) lung adenocarcinoma based on the higher prognostic potential for recurrence and lung cancer-specific death independent of the type of resection or margin. Figure 1 Figure 2
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OA07.07 - Discussant for OA07.05, OA07.06, OA07.07 (ID 7074)
14:20 - 15:50 | Author(s): M. Krasnik
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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Exhibit Showcase Session: AstraZeneca (ID 500)
- Type: Exhibit Showcase
- Track:
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:00, Hall B (Exhibit Showcase Theater)
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ED03 - Global Tobacco Control Policies: Advances & Challenges (ID 266)
- Type: Education Session
- Track: Epidemiology/Tobacco Control and Cessation/Prevention
- Presentations: 4
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ED03.01 - Tobacco Control in the Middle East (ID 6437)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F. Hawari
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract:
Despite many countries signing and ratifying the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), the prevalence of tobacco continues to be on the rise in the Middle East. For example, in countries like Jordan and Tunisia, tobacco prevalence among males is close to 5o% and in Jordan specifically it is estimated to increase to 88% over the next 5 years according to the World Health Organization (WHO). In 2008 it was estimated that five million people died due to tobacco related illnesses. This number is expected to increase to eight million in the year 2030 with individuals from low- and middle-income countries making up approximately 80% of these deaths. Tobacco is a risk factor for all major non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer, pulmonary diseases and diabetes mellitus. The developing countries and the Middle East in particular is bracing for at least a 25% increase in such diseases over the next few years. The world economic forum estimates that the cost for such chronic disabling diseases will exceed USD 15 trillion with cancer costs specifically reaching close to USD 3 trillion. The WHO outlined six strategies that, when implemented simultaneously, will result in significant reduction in tobacco prevalence and its related morbidity and mortality. Those strategies known as MPOWER (Monitor tobacco use and prevention policies, Protect people from tobacco smoke, Offer help to quit tobacco use, Warn about the dangers of tobacco, Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, Raise taxes on tobacco) when implemented in a country like Jordan, for example, close to 180,000 deaths can be prevented over 5 years. Despite the documented benefits of these six strategies, compliance with implementing them across the Middle East remains low. Only few countries have pictorial warnings, exposure to second hand smoke (SHS) is high, tobacco prices remain low and smoking cessation services are scarce. As the population in the Middle East age and with the ongoing rise in tobacco prevalence and obesity, cancer is expected to be on top of the list of diseases causing death and disability in the region. For that reason, King Hussein Cancer Center (KHCC), one of the leading cancer centers in the region, took on the challenge of fighting tobacco across the region in collaboration with regional and international partners. KHCC became the regional host for Global Bridges (an international TDT healthcare alliance co-founded by the Mayo Clinic, the American Cancer Society, and the University of Arizona). The main mission of this collaboration is to address the implementation of article 14 of the FCTC agreement and design and implement effective programmes to promote the cessation of tobacco use and provide adequate treatment for tobacco dependence (TDT). This will also serve to address one of the six strategies recommended by the WHO; Offer help to quit tobacco use. Tobacco dependence in the region is severe. The high number of cigarettes smoked per capita and the significant exposure to SHS make people less capable of quitting on their own. Availing TDT across the region would respond to the high demand for such service (more than 65% of smokers are interested in quitting) and help curb the expected epidemic of NCDs. Long term, quitting tobacco generally reduces the risk of disease and premature death by 90% for those who quit before the age of 30 and by 50% for those who quit before the age of 50. In addition, TDT will optimize the management of certain NCDs such as cancer resulting in better treatment outcomes and long-term survivals. Over the past 5 years, KHCC developed partnership with countries across the Middle East and worked on training healthcare providers (HCPs) on how to treat tobacco dependence (figure 1). More than 2000 HCPS were trained to date (figure 2). Furthermore, 4 hubs designated for TDT training were established in Oman, Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco. In addition, an evidence-based TDT training curriculum specifically designed for the Middle East was developed and in the process of being made available in 3 languages; Arabic, English and French. In conclusion, tobacco dependence represents a major threat to the health and wellbeing of the people in the Middle East. Significant rise in NCDs including cancer is expected over the next few years. Many collaborative initiatives are underway to address this sever epidemic. Figure 1
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ED03.02 - The Australian Tobacco Control Strategy: Lessons Learned (ID 6438)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Daube
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract:
This presentation will outline the developments that have led the international tobacco industry to describe Australia as "the darkest market in the world". This will be presented in the context of international developments, with implications and recommendations for other countries, and researchers, clinicians, health professionals,health organisations and governments There will be discussion of the origins and early history of tobacco control in Australia; the components of comprehensive tobacco control programs; policy-relevant research; successes, failures and distractions; and the roles of key organisations and individuals. This will be followed by an outline of major developments, including the establishment of a consensus approach; national and local approaches; activity by key groups; progress across a range of key areas including public education, advocacy, tobacco advertising bans, taxation, health warnings, smoke-free, exposing tobacco industry activities, cessation supports; and other measures. There will be discussion of the Australian world-leading tobacco plain packaging legislation, which is now being replicated in many other countries, and the very encouraging resultant trends. The Australian experience and successes will be presented in a global context, with recognition that the tobacco industry will always oppose any measures that might reduce smoking and is constantly looking for new ways to resist action and promote its products. From this conclusions will be drawn and recommendations made for all concerned to reduce smoking, with consideration of next possible developments.
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ED03.03 - Tobacco Control and Lung Cancer in Africa (ID 6923)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Ayo-Yusuf
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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ED03.04 - Trumping Big Tobacco (ID 6439)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): B. King
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract:
Abstract for IASLC – Vienna conference ‘Trumping Big Tobacco’ Dr. Bronwyn King, CEO Tobacco Free Portfolios I never would have imagined my work as a doctor would take me to corporate boardrooms across the globe, from Melbourne to London, Paris, New York and more. But then I never would have imagined I would be invested in the tobacco industry either. In my early time as a doctor, I did a placement on the lung cancer ward of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne. Despite being able to offer the very best medicine available, the majority of my patients died, many of them in their 50’s and 60’s, some as young as 40. It was shocking to bear witness to the true impact of tobacco. Whilst the treatment and care of patients is paramount, we must deal with the source of the problem – tobacco and the companies that manufacturer it. Once I discovered that through my compulsory pension fund, I was invested in and actually owned a part of a several tobacco companies, I couldn’t just do nothing – I had to take action. In my quest to disentangle the Australian pension sector from tobacco I’ve become well informed about tobacco and the extent of the ‘tobacco epidemic’, as it is referred to by the World Health Organisation. The numbers astound me. Six million deaths per year are attributed to tobacco and we are on track for one billion tobacco related deaths this century. Many, including investors (both individual mums and dads as well as big financial institutions), aren’t actually aware of the extent of their tobacco exposure. Tobacco stocks are generally picked up in standard products. Often, tobacco companies have not been selected specifically for investment, but they are wrapped up within default investment products, so they still find a way into your portfolio. I founded Tobacco Free Portfolios to collaboratively engage with leaders of the finance sector to encourage tobacco free investment. Finance executives have been alarmed also, at the scale of the tobacco problem and have deeply considered the role they can play in addressing this pressing global issue. One by one, they have acted and are now proud to lead organisations that are tobacco free. There are now 35 tobacco free pension funds in Australia – just over 40% of all funds. Many more will soon follow. Each tobacco free announcement is met with resounding public support. Tobacco Free Portfolios recently took a global step and we were delighted to work with the global insurance giant AXA who announced a tobacco free decision in May 2016, divesting $1.8B Euro of tobacco assets. More organisations are soon to follow suit. That is the way of the future. Affiliations with the tobacco industry are no longer wanted. There are very few individuals or organisations that actively seek to be a part of the tobacco industry. The associations are often so deep and longstanding that it can seem overwhelming – but they must be addressed and they must be undone. Momentum for tobacco-free investment continues to grow steadily and I can confidently say that the conversation in Australian has largely moved from ‘should we go tobacco-free?’ to ‘how can we go tobacco-free?’ This is a pleasing development and a terrific case study, however, there is still much to do to accelerate action across the globe. The good news is that conversations I have in Vienna, Paris, Singapore, London and New York are received with exactly the same concern as the conversations I have in Melbourne, Sydney and Canberra. The devastating impact of tobacco is felt everywhere on Earth. Tobacco is everyone’s problem, not just the doctors that provide the care and treatment. We should all feel obliged to do something about it and all those with investments, including those through compulsory pension schemes have a role to play. It’s up to us to keep tobacco control on the agenda and in public dialogue. A tobacco free future that will allow our children and the generations to come to enjoy long and healthy lives should be our shared hope. If you are interested in supporting this work, please come along to the Tobacco Free Portfolios workshop on the morning of Wednesday 7[th] December. Further details available at www.tobaccofreeportfolios.org
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ED04 - Bronchopulmonary Carcinoids (ID 267)
- Type: Education Session
- Track: SCLC/Neuroendocrine Tumors
- Presentations: 3
- Moderators:V. Gorbunova, J. Hutter
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Lehar 1-2
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ED04.01 - Surgery in Bronchopulmonary Typical and Atypical Carcinoids (ID 6440)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P.L. Filosso, A. Sandri, F. Guerrera
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract:
Complete surgical resection of the tumor is the treatment of choice for Bronchopulmonary Carcinoids (BCs). The goal is to resect the lesion, saving as much lung parenchyma as possible. The type of surgical approach and resection are strictly depend on: a) tumor’s location, b) tumor’s histology and c) presence of lymphnodal metastases. In case of peripheral small BC (Figure 1), the type of surgical resection (wide wedge resection vs segmentectomy or lobectomy) is still matter of debate. Few scientific evidences (1,2) report that a wedge resection could be safely proposed since, in multivariate analysis, long-term survival is not compromised when this approach is used. However, those studies are retrospective, sometimes with limited data on the patients’ follow-up and the number of wedge resections is limited: therefore it is very difficult to draw definitive conclusions with those potential biases. The statement that a wedge resection should be reserved to a small peripheral N0 Typical Carcinoid (TC) seems to be more prudent. An anatomical resection (segmentectomy/lobectomy) should be proposed in case of an Atypical Carcinoid (AC), or whenever the tumor can not be resected in a less invasive manner (e.g: centroparenchymal lesion or when the lobe is totally occupied by the tumor – Figure 2-). The aim to preserve as much lung tissue as possible is the cause of the development of tissue-sparing surgical techniques (the so called “bronchial sleeve resections” and the “sleeve lobectomies”). The first contemplates a bronchial resection with the tumor, without any lung parenchyma exeresis; in the latter, a formal lobectomy with bronchoplastic procedure, is performed to avoid major pulmonary resections (e.g.: bilobectomy or pneumonectomy). An intraoperative frozen section of the bronchial margin has to be performed in all bronchoplastic procedures to confirm that no neoplastic cells are present in the anastomosis (3). Contrariwise, a pneumonectomy should be reserved to patients with a “destroyed lung”, usually caused by long-term obstructive pneumonia, a phenomena caused by an endobronchial tumor growth which completely obstructs the bronchial lumen, or when a tissue sparing resection can not be safely performed. The type of surgical approach (thoracotomy vs. minimally invasive one) must be decided based on tumor’s size and location, as well as the type of surgical resection planned. In general, VATS approach is currently indicated for small and peripheral BCs, while a posterolateral thoracotomy is generally used when a bronchoplastic procedure must be performed. Lymphadenectomy, and in particular, systematic hilar and mediastinal lymphadenectomy, must be always performed, in accordance with the European Society of Thoracic Surgeons (ESTS) recommendations for intraoperative lymph node assessment (4). A minimum of six nodal stations, three of which mediastinal, have to be harvested, including the subcarenal ones. Lymph nodal metastases, in fact, may be present in up to 25% of TCs and in less than 50% of ACs (5,6). In case of N positive (N+) BCs, and whenever feasible, upfront surgery may be proposed: a complete resection (R0) must be performed, whilst debulking interventions are not recommended. A satisfactory overall survival for BCs with lymph nodal metastases has been reported in several papers (7,8): those patients, in fact, survive longer than those with N+ NSCLC. An endobronchial resection (usually through rigid bronchoscopy) has been sometimes advocated for purely endobronchial tumors (3): it is mandatory to determine whether the tumor may present with an extrabronchial growth, in which case a local treatment alone is not sufficient, and should be followed by surgery (with or without bronchoplastic techniques). A palliative endobronchial treatment may be offered to those patients unfit for surgery, in which severe obstructive phenomena caused by the endoluminal tumor growth cause infective and respiratory consequences. Post-resectional tumor relapses may occur approximately in 20% of ACs and in 5% TCs (3,8): the risk of recurrence is strictly dependent from the histologic tumor subtype, the presence of lymph nodal metastases and the completeness of resection (9,10). Most recurrences are distant (liver, adrenal gland, bone), but sometimes, local relapses (lung and/or mediastinum) have also been reported. Surgery, with the same aim of the elective one, may be offered to those patients, improving their survival. REFERENCES 1 Yendamuri S, Gold D, Jayaprakash V, Dexter E, Nwogu C, Demmy T: Is sublobar resection sufficient for carcinoid tumors? Ann Thorac Surg. 2011;92:1774-1778 2 Ferguson MK, Landreneau RJ, Hazelrigg SR, Altorki NK, Naunheim KS, Zwischenberger JB, Kent M, Yim AP: Long-term outcome after resection for bronchial carcinoid tumors. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2000;18:156-61 3 Detterbeck FC: Management of carcinoid tumors. Ann Thorac Surg 2010;89:998-1005 4 Lardinois D, De Leyn P, Van Schil P, Porta RR, Waller D, Passlick B, Zielinski M, Lerut T, Weder W: ESTS guidelines for intraoperative lymph node staging in non-small cell lung cancer. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2006;30:787-792 5 Lim E, Yap YK, De Stavola BL, Nicholson AG, Goldstraw P: The impact of stage and cell type on the prognosis of pulmonary neuroendocrine tumors. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2005;130:969-972 6 Daddi N, Ferolla P, Urbani M, Semeraro A, Avenia N, Ribacchi R, Puma F, Daddi G: Surgical treatment of neuroendocrine tumors of the lung. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2004;26:813-817 7 Filosso PL, Ferolla P, Guerrera F, Ruffini E, Travis WD, Rossi G, Lausi PO, Oliaro A; European Society of Thoracic Surgeons Lung Neuroendocrine Tumors Working-Group Steering Committee: Multidisciplinary management of advanced lung neuroendocrine tumors. J Thorac Dis. 2015;7(Suppl 2):S163-S171 8 Filosso PL, Oliaro A, Ruffini E, Bora G, Lyberis P, Asioli S, Delsedime L, Sandri A, Guerrera F: Outcome and prognostic factors in bronchial carcinoids: a single-center experience. J Thorac Oncol. 2013;8:1282-1288 9 Caplin ME, Baudin E, Ferolla P, Filosso P, Garcia-Yuste M, Lim E, Oberg K, Pelosi G, Perren A, Rossi RE, Travis WD; ENETS consensus conference participants: Pulmonary neuroendocrine (carcinoid) tumors: European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society expert consensus and recommendations for best practice for typical and atypical pulmonary carcinoids. Ann Oncol. 2015;26:1604-1620 10 Öberg K, Hellman P, Ferolla P, Papotti M; ESMO Guidelines Working Group: Neuroendocrine bronchial and thymic tumors: ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up. Ann Oncol. 2012;23 Suppl 7:vii120-vii123Figure 1 Figure 2
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ED04.02 - Systemic Therapy of Bronchopulmonary Typical and Atypical Carcinoids: Current Status and Perspectives (ID 6441)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E. Baudin
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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IA03 - What are the Lung Cancer Patients Needs in the Different Countries? (ID 289)
- Type: Interactive Session
- Track: Patient Support and Advocacy Groups
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:S. Vallone, I. Beunders, N. Enwerem-Bromson
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Schubert 2
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What are the Lung Cancer Patients Needs in the Different Countries? (ID 7222)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): I. Beunders
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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JTO - Meet the JTO Editor (ID 357)
- Type: Education Session
- Track:
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:A. Adjei
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:15, Schubert 4
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Meet the JTO Editor (ID 6749)
14:30 - 15:15 | Author(s): A. Adjei
- Abstract
- Presentation
Abstract not provided
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P1.01 - Poster Session with Presenters Present (ID 453)
- Type: Poster Presenters Present
- Track: Epidemiology/Tobacco Control and Cessation/Prevention
- Presentations: 59
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Hall B (Poster Area)
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P1.01-001 - Reduction of Cigarette Consumption through a National Policy for Tobacco Control in Brazil (ID 4045)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.P.L. Teixeira, T. Cavalcante
- Abstract
Background:
According to WHO, “approximately one person dies every six seconds due to tobacco, accounting for one in 10 adult deaths. Up to half of current users will eventually die of a tobacco-related disease”, which can be lung cancer (87%), pulmonary disease (61%) and coronary heart disease (32%), considering secondhand smoke exposure too as says the Surgeon General´s Report. To protect the health of the Brazilian population, the government has been applying measures, since the 90 years, to reduce the harm caused by tobacco use. Brazil is also committed to reduce the premature mortality from tobacco use in 30% from 2013 to 2025, to achieve one of the nine voluntary WHO Global NCD´s Targets.
Methods:
Quantitative secondary data analysis confronting the cigarette prevalence rates found in Risk and Protective Factors Surveillance for Chronic Diseases Telephone Survey (VIGITEL) and the National Policy for Tobacco Control measures.
Results:
Before ratifying the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, in 1996 the government started promoting smoke-free places, banning the advertising, promotion and sponsorship, that were finally regulated in 2014. In 2011, the Secretariat of Federal Revenue developed a new system for cigarette taxation to establish a minimum price for a pack of twenty cigarettes and raise the cigarette´s excise tax gradually. In May,2016 the total taxation represents 76% of the cigarette price and will bring to 81% afther December 2016. This is one of the measures of the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control/WHO more cost-effective in the country: Article 6, which deals with the rising prices and taxes on tobacco products to reduce demand. Several surveys and studies point to a reduction in smoking prevalence. Every year, since 2006, the VIGITEL report has shown prevalence rates collected in the entire adult population of the 27 state capitals. In 2015 the frequency of smokers decreased to 10.4%, compared to 2006 which were 15.7% for both sexes. The report also reiterated the effectiveness of the prices and taxes measure, when you compare the frequency of former smokers with lower education, those representing people with lower income. In 2006 they were 25.6%, and in 2015 they increased to 29.1%.
Conclusion:
The present study shows a prevalence decline as a positive result coming from the National Policy for Tobacco Control implementation between the years of 2006 and 2015. To achieve the WHO Global NCD´s Target we still have too much work to do, specilally protect the National Policy from the tobacco industry interference.
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P1.01-002 - Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure and EGFR Mutations/ALK Translocation in Never Smokers. A Multicentre Study in Spanish Never-Smokers (ID 4581)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Pérez-Ríos, A. Ruano-Ravina, M. Zapata, M. Torres-Durán, V. Leiro-Fernández, I. Parente-Lamelas, I. Vidal-García, O. Castro-Añón, M. Amenedo, M. Provencio-Pulla, A. Golpe Gómez, R. Guzmán-Taveras, M.J. Mejuto-Martí, Á. Rodríguez, J. Barros-Dios
- Abstract
Background:
Mutations or translocations in driver genes of lung cancer such as EGFR or ALK are important treatment targets for advanced lung cancer. These alterations are present mainly in never-smokers. Exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) might provide some explanation to the presence of such genetic traits. Furthermore, ETS exposure might have a different effect should occur at home in adult life, during childhood, or at work. We aim to know if ETS exposure is associated with EGFR mutations or ALK alterations in a huge sample of never smoking lung cancer cases.
Methods:
We recruited never smoking lung cancer cases diagnosed consecutively in 9 Spanish Hospitals since 2011. We collected extensive information on different lifestyle activities and also measured residential radon exposure. Cases had to be older than 30 years with no upper age limit and with no previous history of cancer. A never smoker was defined as: 1) an individual who smoked less than 1 daily cigarette for no more than 6 months or, 2) no more than 100 cigarettes smoked in lifetime. EGFR mutations and ALK alterations were determined using standard procedures. Logistic regressions were performed to analyze the influence of exposure to ETS in different settings (adult life at home, at work or during childhood). The dependent variables were EGFR mutation (of any type) or not, or ALK translocation (present/absent). Results were adjusted by age, gender and residential radon exposure.
Results:
We included 389 never smoking lung cancer cases. 80.5% were females and the median age was 71 and the interquartilic range 61-78 years. 246 patients had EGFR determined (63.2% of the total) and of them, EGFR was mutated in 43%. ALK status was determined in 97 patients (24.9% of the total), and was positive in 16 patients (16.5%). Living at home with a smoker for more than 20 years was not associated with EGFR mutation or ALK translocation, and the same occurred for being exposed to ETS at work. When exposure to ETS in childhood (before 16) was considered, we observed that those exposed to ETS had an OR of EGFR mutation of 0.57 (95%CI 0.31-1.05; p= 0.07). No association was observed for ALK translocation.
Conclusion:
These results suggest that exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in childhood might reduce the chance of EGFR mutation in never smokers with lung cancer. This observation would add more evidence to avoid exposure to ETS in any time of life. Funding: ISCIII/PI13/01765/Cofinanciado FEDER
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- Abstract
Background:
Although the most important risk factor for lung cancer is smoking, lung cancer in never smokers (LCINS) is being increasingly reported. Thus, studies of other risk factors for lung cancer are needed. Recently, radon (Rn), a natural, noble gas, was recognized as the second most common risk factor for lung cancer. OBJECTIVES To identify variations in genes associated with lung cancer in never smokers exposed to radon gas.
Methods:
We conducted an optimized next generation sequencing analysis of lung cancer-related genes in normal and tumor tissues from Korean LCINS patients who had been exposed to radon gas indoors. A total of 926 SNPs showing genome-wide statistical significance were analyzed.
Results:
Several genes commonly associated with lung cancer , EGFR and TP53 in chromosomes 7 and 17, respectively, showed significant correlations with LCINS. Others included ERG in chromosome 21, RIT1 in chromosome 1, and BIRC6 in chromosome 2. Meanwhile, several additional loci showed novel associations with LCINS as a result of exposure to radon gas, including PDK1, VHL, WHSC1L1, CHD4, MBD2, ATRX, CCND1, and PTPRD.
Conclusion:
Using next generation sequencing, we found several lung cancer-related genes to be associated with tumors in never smokers exposed to radon. Most of the noted loci have not been shown to be associated with lung cancer, and provide new insights into the development of LCINS. Our findings may serve as a reference for replication and validation studies on the prevention and treatment of LCINS as a result of exposure to radon gas. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was supported by the Korean Ministry of Environment as part of the “Environmental Health Action Program” (grant number 2015001350002).
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P1.01-004 - Is There Any Role of Residential Radon in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Patients Harboring Molecular Alterations? (ID 4770)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Mezquita, A. Benito, M.E. Olmedo, P. Reguera, A. Madariaga, M. Villamayor, S.P. Cortez, L. Gorospe, A. Santon, S. Mayoralas, R. Hernanz, A. Cabanero, A. Carrato, P. Garrido
- Abstract
Background:
Radon gas is the first cause of lung cancer in non-smoking population. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends radon concentration lower than 100 Bq/m3. In recent years, most of the advances in personalized therapy in NSCLC patients also occurred in non-smokers. Furthermore, limited information is available about the clinical and pathological characteristics in patients exposed to radon gas. We hypothesized that residential radon could be associated to some specific pathological and molecular alterations in NSCLC patients.
Methods:
Prospective study of a cohort of NSCLC patients harbouring molecular alterations (EGFR, BRAF mutations (m), ALK and ROS1 rearrangements (r)) in our centre, between September 2014 and October 2015. A radon detector alpha-track was given to each patient to measure residential radon concentration for 3 months; it was analysed using optical microscopy. We collected demographic information, smoking history, environmental exposure and clinical characteristics. The pathologic characteristics were prospectively revised by a lung cancer pathologist, including histology pattern, grade and inflammatory infiltrate. EGFR and BRAF mutation (m) were analyzed using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and ALK and ROS1 rearrangement by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Data was analyzed using IBM SPSS v.20.
Results:
60 detectors were delivered (10% missing), 48 patients were evaluated (89.6% living in Madrid). Median age 66.5 (29- 82); 33 (68.8%) females; 33 non-smokers (31.3% passive smokers and 35.4% childhood exposure) and 3 (6.3%) light smokers. 100% adenocarcinoma (35.4% mixte, 18.8% acinar, 10.4% solid, 8.3% papillary, 8.3% micropapilllary, 8.4% others and 10.4% unknown); EGFRm 36 patients, ALKr 10 patients and BRAFm 2 patients. Home characteristics measured: 79.2% flat (89.1% measurement at bedroom); building material: 89.6% bricks. Median length of stay was 28 years (2-55). Median height of house 2 floors (0-15). Median of radon concentration: 104 Bq/m3 (42- 915); 60.42% over WHO recommendation. By molecular alteration: EGFRm median 96 Bq/m3 (42-915), ALKr median 116 (64-852) and BRAFm median 125 (125). A significant association was observed between non-EGFR mutation and concentration over the WHO recommendation (p=0.044). In univariant analysis, radon concentration was associated with non-mucinous histology and low tumoral grade (p=0.033 and p=0.023, respectively).
Conclusion:
Our final results have shown no consistent association between residential radon and molecular alterations in NSCLC patients, but a trend has been suggested in ALKr and BRAFm. Large multicenter studies are needed to confirm this hypothesis.
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- Abstract
Background:
India with 11.2%(111.9 million) of world’s smokers has 2[nd ]largest population at elevated risk of lung cancer. Almost twice, 206 million(GATS, 2010), are Smokeless tobacco(ST) users in India, highest globally. Supreme Court of India observed that gutka and pan-masala are food products. Beginning in 2012, almost all state governments in India banned gutka and pan-masala containing tobacco. APPREHENSION was raised that ban on ST products will cause switching to smoking by huge ST user population vastly increasing risk of lung-cancer in India. This ban provided natural experiment on which this observational research studied how ban on popular ST products alters pattern of tobacco-use, especially smoking. Findings are expected to be strategically significant to inform future policies.
Methods:
Questionnaire of Global Adult Tobacco Survey-India(2010), developed by WHO,CDC and Govt. of India was modified to answer research questions and accommodate retrospective-cohort study design. Through 2-step randomization process, 500 households were sampled from Delhi. Participants were adults and interviewed during March-June,2016 comprehensively, including tobacco-use currently and before gutka-ban. Inbuilt mechanisms in standardized questionnaire cross-validated self-report and minimised recall bias. Data was entered into SPSS and statistically analysed.
Results:
94% of 500 households visited agreed to participate. 73.4%of pre-ban gutka-users switched to twin-sachet (pan-masala and chewing-tobacco sold separately by gutka-manufacturers to circumvent law). Delhi’s order bans all ST products. But, except premixed gutka, remaining ST products are freely available and consumed. 21.8%switched to khaini or other ST products. A large fraction switched from singledose sachets to multidose sachet. Interestingly, 96.2%respondents believed tobacco as very harmful(84.6%) or somewhat harmful(11.6%). However, only 18.6%gutka users attempted quitting after ban. 4.8%successfully quitted. In our sample, we DIDNOT find anyone switching to smoking due to gutka unavailability. On an opposite thought, one may expect, ban on an ST product(Gutka) will increase awareness and motivate smokers to quit as spillover effect. But it wasn’t observed either.
Conclusion:
In absence of strong quitting promotion campaign, ban on selective tobacco products has limited role in changing prevalence of tobacco use. If selective ST products are banned, ST users preferably switch to other available ST products, BUT NOT to smoking. As majority ST users switched instead of quitting (after gutka-ban without simultaneous quitting campaign), we may logically conclude that effective ban on all ST products may lead ST users to switch to less favourable option of smoking. This is, however, subject to verification by similar study if there is ever effective ban on all ST products.
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P1.01-006 - Interstitial Lung Diseases Are an Antecedent of Lung Cancer (ID 5353)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): W. Choi
- Abstract
Background:
Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis may progress into lung cancer through continuous accumulation and rapid proliferation of fibroblasts and repeated epithelial injury. Repetitive injury and repair can lead to multiple genetic alterations affecting cellular growth, differentiation, and survival, which may elicit malignant potential in the injured area. Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis appears on chest images through expression of bilateral reticular or reticulonodular opacities, called interstitial lung diseases. The clinical significance of these diseases remains poorly understood. To investigate whether interstitial lung diseases increase lung cancer incidence in a cohort of patients from a national population.
Background:
Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis may progress into lung cancer through continuous accumulation and rapid proliferation of fibroblasts and repeated epithelial injury. Repetitive injury and repair can lead to multiple genetic alterations affecting cellular growth, differentiation, and survival, which may elicit malignant potential in the injured area. Diffuse pulmonary fibrosis appears on chest images through expression of bilateral reticular or reticulonodular opacities, called interstitial lung diseases. The clinical significance of these diseases remains poorly understood. To investigate whether interstitial lung diseases increase lung cancer incidence in a cohort of patients from a national population.
Results:
A nationwide retrospective cohort study using Korean Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service data, including 13,666 patients with interstitial lung disease (6.4% with concomitant idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis) diagnosed January–December 2009. The end of follow-up was June 31, 2014. Up to four matching chronic obstructive pulmonary disease controls with and without concomitant interstitial lung disease (8,012 cases) were selected to compare the lung cancer high-risk group. Lung cancer was counted after diagnosis of interstitial lung disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Conclusion:
The incidence of lung cancer was 126.9 cases per 10,000 person-years (2,732 cancers) in the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease group, 156.6 (809 cancers) in the interstitial lung disease group, and 370.3 (967 cancers) in the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with interstitial lung disease group. Among various interstitial lung disease definitions, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis showed the highest lung cancer incidence. A total of 112 of the 879 patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis developed lung cancer, an incidence of 381 cases per 10,000 person-years. Interstitial lung diseases have high potential to develop into lung cancer even when combined with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
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P1.01-007 - A Cross-Sectional Study on Tobacco Consumption Pattern among Auto Rickshaw Drivers in Chennai City, Tamil Nadu, India (ID 4415)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D.L. Francis
- Abstract
Background:
Tobacco use is a major preventable cause of premature death and diseases, currently leading to five million deaths worldwide which are expected to raise over eight million deaths worldwide by 2030. India is the second largest consumer of tobacco in the world. Tobacco use is a leading cause of deaths and disabilities in India as well, killing about 1.2 lakh people in 2010. About 29% of adults use tobacco on a daily basis and an additional 5% use it occasionally. This study is contemplated with an aim to assess the prevalence of tobacco consumption and the associated factors involved in its consumption, as this group of the population is under constant pressure and account for the workforce of the country. So through this study we could be able to know * The reasons of consumption. * Amount of consumption *Awareness of ill effect of tobacco consumption* Out of Pocket expenditure.
Methods:
ACross sectional descriptive study was conducted among Auto Rickshaw Drivers in Chennai City.Auto drivers who were working for more than two years and present on the day of examination and who were willing to participate in the study were included.Cluster random sampling technique was used. 400 samples were selected from 40 auto stands of various parts of Chennai City.Data was collected using a Survey Proforma which comprised of a Questionnairewhich can assess the frequency of consumption, age of initiation, the amount of consumption, mental stress, economic factors, any past history of disease and most importantly the awareness towards oral cancer.The data recorded was transferred and analysed using SPSS version 20.Chi- square test was used to test the significance between groups.
Results:
Prevalence among auto rickshaw drivers for consumption of tobacco products was very high (87%). Auto rickshaw drivers were mostly used tobacco in the form of Gutkha (72%) and bidi (40%) in comparison to other products. In the opinion of auto rickshaw drivers increase in tax may reduce it consumption and the majority of drivers (70%) think that tobacco must be banned.
Conclusion:
Prevalence of tobacco use among auto rickshaw drivers was very high. Mostly they use tobacco products to reduce stress, to be awake or to remove nervousness but a large number of participants also use them without any reason. Almost one half of the study population was suffering from tobacco related diseases like cough, ulcer on mouth, lung disorder. They are in definite need of tobacco cessation activities.
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P1.01-008 - Knowledge, Attitudes, and Smoking Behaviours among Dental and Medical Students in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India (ID 4839)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D.L. Francis
- Abstract
Background:
Tobacco use continues to be the leading cause of preventable disease and it is responsible for more than 5 million deaths each year worldwide. Despite this, there are still 650 million smokers in the world. The prevalence of smoking among adults accounts for approximately 25% deaths annually. smoking remains the main cause of mortality and morbidity in the developing nations. Healthcare professionals have an important role to play both as advisers influencing smoking cessation and as role models. However, many of them continue to smoke. Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of smoking cessation programs and the importance of physician’s advice to their patients. The aims of the present study are as follows: (i) to evaluate smoking prevalence, knowledge and attitudes, and tobacco cessation training (ii) to examine the difference between smokers and nonsmokers;
Methods:
A structured questionnaire consisting of 14 questions related to tobacco/smoking habits, cessation training and role of health professionals in tobacco control were asked to the study population and their response was recorded. Random sampling method was used and data was collected from a cross-sectional survey. The surveywas conducted between January and February 2015. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS version 17 and Logistic regression model was used to identify possible associations with tobacco smoking status. The level of significance was
Results:
A total of 259answered the questionnaire of which 29% declared to be smokers. About 53% of the males have smoked at least once in their life and the age of cigarette initiation was 16-17 years for 28% of the sample.76%considered health professionals as behavioural models for patients, and 96% affirmed that health professionals have a role in giving advice or information about smoking cessation. Although 87% heard about smoking related issues during undergraduate courses, only 17% received specific smoking cessation training during specialization. 93% of the sample agreed that health professionals should receive specific training on smoking cessation according to while 6% were of the opposite opinion.
Conclusion:
The present study highlights the importance of focusing attention on smoking cessation training, given the high prevalence of smokers among physicians specializing in medicine and dentistry, their key role both as advisers and behavioural models, and the limited tobacco training offered in the curriculum. In the field of public health, tobacco screening, and intervention is one of the most effective clinical preventive services.
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P1.01-009 - Smoking and Lung Cancer: Data from the Single Center in Albania (ID 4128)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Xhemalaj, F. Caushi, I. Peposhi, E. Hila, G. Pumo, A. Hasa, H. Hafizi
- Abstract
Background:
Albania is a country with a high prevalence of smoking but a national cancer registry has not been initiated yet and data on lung cancer are scarce.
Methods:
Aim - Methods: In 2010-2014, 1254 patients presented to our hospital with either symptoms or an abnormal finding in their chest X-ray and were diagnosed with lung cancer. This is a descriptive retrospective study, reporting data on the histological type of cancer and smoking history
Results:
Results: Of the 1254 patients, 79% (n= 1001) were men and 21% (n=253) women . Age range was (16-89), with mean age in men 62.4 ±8,5 and in women 58±10,2. Diagnosis was confirmed by histology [table 1] : Regarding NSCLC, 78% of patients had an advanced stage (III and IV). Only 268 patients were non-smokers, 126 were ex-smokers and the remaining 67 % (n=860) were current smokers with high exposure (92 pack/years). Day hospital avarage is 7 day,and day range was(1-21) with SD± 6.4. Performance status was:60.2% improved,35.2% idem,3.3% dead in hospital.Squamous cell carcinoma Adenocarcinoma Small cell others Total men 56%(n=560) 22%(n=220) 15%(n=150) 7%(n=71) 100%(n=1001) women 11%(n=27) 72%(n=183) 5%(n=13) 12%(n=30) 100%(n=253)
Conclusion:
In Albania,lung cancer is an increasing pathology (p<0.005) and there is a high prevalence of squamous cell carcinoma especially in men,probably associated with the heavy history of smoking and most patients are diagnosed at a late stage.Policies for smoking cessation should be strengthened and a lung cancer screening program should be initiated.
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P1.01-010 - Awareness of Lung Cancer Risk Factors among Lay Persons and Physicians (ID 4686)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Greillier, J. Morere, J. Viguier, C. Touboul, J. Blay, F. Eisinger, C. Lhomel, X. Pivot, A.B. Cortot, S. Couraud
- Abstract
Background:
Tobacco consumption, and more specifically active smoking, remains the main risk factor for lung cancer (LC) and continues to be the target of awareness campaigns worldwide. However, in recent decades, other risk factors have been identified, including passive smoking, atmospheric pollution and occupational exposure. This analysis focuses on awareness of LC risk factors among the lay population and physicians.
Methods:
The 4th French nationwide observational survey, EDIFICE 4, was conducted by phone interviews of a representative sample of 1602 subjects, aged between 40 and 75 years, from June 12 to July 10, 2014. A mirror survey was also conducted by phone among physicians between July 9 and August 8, 2014. Both surveys were conducted using the quota method on representative samples of 1602 lay persons and 301 physicians. The following analyzes were conducted amongst 1463 lays persons with no history of cancer and 301 physicians. Interviewees were asked to cite the five main risk factors for LC.
Results:
LC risk factors associated with tobacco in general were widely cited in first position by both physicians and the lay population (100% and 96%, respectively; P≤0.01), with the role of active smoking (100% vs 94%, P≤0.01) and passive smoking (77% vs. 68%, P≤0.01) clearly identified. Twice as many physicians cited asbestos as a risk factor, ranking it in second place, compared with the lay population (77% vs. 30%, P≤0.01). Atmospheric pollution was cited to the same degree by physicians and the lay population (49% vs. 43%, P=0.05), the latter ranking it second. Heredity and family history came fourth (32% vs. 13%, P≤0.01) and alcohol fifth (13% vs. 10%, not statistically significant), in both populations. Infections and other respiratory disorders were cited by less than one person in ten (7%). Poor dietary habits were very rarely cited by either physicians or the lay population (<1% vs 4%, respectively, P≤0.01).
Conclusion:
The awareness of risk factors for lung cancer is broadly consistent with the established risk factors, among both physicians and the lay persons in our survey. As expected, tobacco was ranked first, followed by atmospheric pollution and asbestos, though the latter is less present in the mind of the lay population compared to physicians. It is noteworthy that even among physicians, a history of respiratory disorders was only marginally acknowledged.
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- Abstract
Background:
Chronic airway inflammation has been emerging targets for lung cancer chemoprevention as well as treatment of COPD. The aim of the present study was to determine the role of roflumilast and aerosolized budesonide in benzo(a)pyrene-induced lung cancer in mice and to elucidate the possible their mechanisms.
Methods:
Female A/J mice were given a single dose of benzo(a)pyrene. Intraperitoneal administration of roflumilast (1mg/kg, 5mg/kg) began 2 weeks post-carcinogen treatment and continued tri-weekly for 28 weeks. Aerosolized budesonide was administered by aerosol delivery for 2 min/day and 5 days/week. Tumor load was determined by averaging the total tumor volume in each group.
Results:
Benzo(a)pyrene induced an average tumor size of 9.4 ± 1.8 tumors per mouse, with an average tumor load of 19.5 ± 3.8mm[3]. Roflumilast treatment at 1 and 5 mg/kg did not inhibit tumor number, however, reduced tumor load, an average of 8.8 ± 2.0 mm[3] at 5mg/kg treatment, significantly. Aerosolized budesonide administration did not show reductions of tumor number or load. The decreased expressions of cyclic AMP and protein kinase A caused by benzo(a)pyrene were increased by roflumilast treatment. NF-κB expression in tumor tissues was lower in the roflumilast group than the place group.
Conclusion:
In vivo experiments in the benzo(a)pyrene-induced model of lung cancer show that roflumilast significant inhibits tumorigenicity via suppression of inflammation. Possible mechanisms between cAMP pathway and lung cancer development will needed to be determined.
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P1.01-012 - Kava Effects on the Metabolism of Tobacco-Specific Carcinogen 4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-Pyridyl)-1-Butanone (NNK) in Humans (ID 6279)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Oostra, N. Fujioka, C. Xing, S. Narayanapillai, J. Paladino, H. Alves
- Abstract
Background:
Kava is extracted from the roots of piper methysticum and is consumed by South Pacific Islanders as a relaxing beverage. Epidemiologic evidence points to a protective effect of kava against tobacco-induced lung cancer. NNK is a potent tobacco-specific carcinogen indisputably linked to lung cancer formation. Kava reduced NNK-induced lung adenoma formation in the A/J mouse model. Data also suggest that enhanced NNAL detoxification may be a potential mechanism by which kava exerts a chemopreventive effect. In humans, urinary NNAL is a validated biomarker of NNK uptake. We conducted a clinical trial in smokers to assess the effect of kava on NNK metabolism. The primary objective was to compare urinary total NNAL before and after kava administration. Secondary objectives included comparing the NNAL-gluc/NNAL-free ratio, determining the safety of kava, and quantifying O[6]-methylguanine adducts. The hypothesis was that kava administration would result in increased levels of NNAL in the urine (and increased NNAL-gluc/NNAL-free ratio), reflecting increased elimination and/or increased detoxification of NNK. Additionally, we hypothesized that kava could reduce O[6]-methylguanine adducts.
Methods:
We conducted a single-arm, open-label clinical trial in adult healthy smokers, in which subjects took a commercial kava supplement three times daily for seven days. Twenty-four hour urine collections were collected at baseline, days 4-5, and days 6-7 of the kava intervention for NNAL quantification. Blood samples were collected at baseline, day 4, and day 7 of the kava intervention for safety monitoring and for DNA adduct analysis. Subjects also completed a detailed tobacco questionnaire, food diary, smoking diary, and cigarette evaluation scale (CES) questionnaire. To date, 17 subjects (goal = 18) have completed the study.
Results:
The results and statistics are being finalized. Short-term kava administration was safe with no evidence of hepatotoxicity. Subjects experienced less of the reinforcing effects of smoking after short-term kava administration as determined by the CES scores. The total CES score decreased on average by 4.47, from 45.53 to 41.06 (p=0.053, 95% CI -0.06-9.01). Notably, the smoking “satisfaction” scores decreased by 0.607 (p=0.024, 95% CI 0.09-1.12).
Conclusion:
This is the first study investigating the effect of kava on NNK metabolism in humans and is the first step to gain a more sophisticated mechanistic understanding of kava’s role in potentially modulating tobacco-related lung cancer risk. Short-term kava administration is safe in healthy adult smokers. Kava holds potential as a possible chemopreventive agent for smokers or tobacco cessation aide.
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P1.01-013 - Emphysematous Changes and Pulmonary Function for Asbestos-Related Lung Cancer in Japan (ID 3736)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Kishimoto
- Abstract
Background:
Smoking accelerates the incidence of asbestos-related lung cancer. We evaluated emphysematous changes by chest CT and pulmonary function for asbestos-related lung cancer in Japan.
Methods:
Two hundred and twenty-two patients of asbestos-related lung cancer compensated by Japanese compensation law were evaluated as age, gender, smoking index, histology, survival, therapy and occupational history including first asbestos exposed age, asbestos exposing terms and latency from the first asbestos exposure to lung cancer. Radiographic evaluation was done by chest CT using Goddard classification of emphysema. Pulmonary function test was done by spirometry and flow-volume curve.
Results:
Ages range from 49 to 92 years with a median of 75 years. Male occupied 97.7%. Non-smoker is only 13 patients and other 209 are smokers with Brinkman Index ranges from 45 to 3000 of a median of 900. For histology of lung cancer, 60.4% are adenocarcinoma and 22.4% of squamous cell carcinoma, 12.6 %of small cell carcinoma and 1.8 of large cell carcinoma and 2.6 % of pleomorphic carcinoma et al. Eighty seven patients were operated and other 87 patients performed chemotherapy. Best supportive therapy is 34 patients. Median survival was 15.8 months. For asbestos histories, median first exposed age was 23 years, asbestos exposing term was 32 years and the latency of lung cancer was 50 years. For Goddard score of emphysematous changes, 28% showed 0 point and 33% of 1~4 points and more than 21 points occupied only 4%, which means very low percentages of emphysematous changes for these asbestos-related lung cancer, nonetheless of high percentages of heavy smokers. For pulmonary function test, FEV1.0% is 70.5%±11.3% and %FEV1.0 is 85.6±22.2%. More than half patients are normal pulmonary function except more than 1,000 of Brinkman index or more than 15 points of Goddard score. From the classification of GOLD criteria, 54.1% are normal, stage 1 is 20.7%, stage 2 is 22.5 % stage 3 is 1.8% and stage 4 is only 0.9%.
Conclusion:
Almost all of asbestos-related lung cancer in Japan are heavy smoker, but 61% showed none or low grade of emphysematous changes by chest CT and only 2.7% had severe pulmonary dysfunction.
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P1.01-014 - The Role of Hereditary Factor, Profession and the Habit of Cigarette Smoking in Developing Lung Cancer (ID 3977)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): I. Pavlovska, N. Orovcanec, B. Tausanova, B. Zafirova
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer (LC) is the most common and deadliest cancer in the world. In the Republic of Macedonia, within the period 2002-2012, the LC took the first place according to the frequency of appearing in men, while it was on the fourth place in women. The number of the risk factors is great being connected with the occurrence of LC. The aim of this study was to analyze the role of genetic factor, professional exposure and the habit of cigarette smoking in occurrence of lung cancer.
Methods:
The research was conducted as a case-control study. It included 185 patients diseased of LC (investigated group-IG) and the same number of persons without malignant disease (control group-CG). In the study were included only interviewees with pathohistologically confirmed LC. Through calculating the risks of the Odds ratio (OR), the risk-factors, which had a role in occurrence of the disease, were quantified, while with the Confidence intervals (CI), the statistical significance for the error level less 0,05 (p) was defiend.
Results:
According to the investigation results, malignant disease of two members in one family was found in 13,5% of the IG, 9,4% of the CG, respectively. Current smokers (CS) with present hereditary factor had almost 4 times (OR=3,95; 95%CI, 1,78-8,77), greater risk to become ill compared to the never smokers (NS) without hereditary factor. The risk was greater when the same would be compared to the NS with present hereditary factor (OR=8,76; 95%CI, 1,80-42,68).In the diseased, the professional exposition was present in 68,6% from IG, versus 67% in the CG. The highest risk for LC was found in transport workers (OR=2,50;95%CI, 1,01-6,15) and automehanics (OR=2,31;95%CI, 0,76-7,07). CS represented 67% of diseased individuals versus 40,5% of the CG. The risk for them to develop LC was 5,54 (95%CI, 3,0-10,23), times significantly greater compared to the NS. The risk for the disease was significantly greater in individuals who were smoking >20years (y), >20cigarettes/day (c/day), compared to those, who, in the same time period, smoked <20c/day (OR=3,78;95%CI, 2,04-7,01). The risk to develop LC in former smokers (FS), who >20y smoked >20c/day was 2,40 (95%CI, 0,94-6,14), times greater compared to those, who smoked >20y, <20c/day.
Conclusion:
This disease developed twice more commonly in the examined individuals, exposed to professional carcinogens. The LC is multifactor disease for which development, besides smoking, as a main determinant, in mutual interaction are the genetic and other factors of the surrounding and the way of living.
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P1.01-015 - Polyphenols-Rich Fruit Extracts Prevent Tobacco Specific Nitrosamine-Induced DNA Damage in Lung Epithelial Cells (ID 3734)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D.I.M. Amararathna, D.W. Hoskin, M. Johnston, H.P.V. Rupasinghe
- Abstract
Background:
Diets rich in polyphenols are well-known to reduce lung cancer risk among high-risk populations. We analyzed the efficacy of polyphenols-rich Haskap (Lonicera caerulea L.) fruit extracts in preventing tobacco specific nitrosamine (TSNA)-induced DNA damage in BEAS-2B lung epithelial cells.
Methods:
Monomeric polyphenols of Haskap fruits were extracted in ethanol and water, and profiled. TSNA, 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) and 4-[(acetoxymethyl) nitrosamino]-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNKOAc) were used (at sub-lethal concentrations) independently to induce the carcinogenesis process in BEAS-2B cells. Cell viability assay was confirmed that the tested concentrations of Haskap extracts were not cytotoxic to BEAS-2B cells.
Results:
The Haskap extracts contain diversity of polyphenols including phenolic acids and flavonoids, however, cyanidin-3-O-glucoside was the most predominant. Pre-treatment of cells with the Haskap extracts could significantly reduce the NNK- and NNKOAc-induced DNA double strand breaks, DNA fragmentation and intracellular reactive oxygen species, compared to non-treated cells. Immunocytochemistry for H2AX-phosphorylation (Serine 139, red) A. NNKOAc 100 µM, 3 h; B. Haskap ethanol extract (50 µg/mL, 3 h)+NNKOAc (100 µM, 3 h). DNA counter-staining was performed with 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole (blue). Figure 1Figure 2
Conclusion:
The polyphenols-rich Haskap extracts could prevent TSNA-induced DNA damage in lung epithelial cells in vitro. Protective effects of Haskap polyphenols against DNA damage are being investigated in vivo using A/J mice.
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P1.01-016 - An International Epidemiological Analysis of Young Patients Diagnosed with NSCLC (AduJov - CLICaP) (ID 6296)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Corrales-Rodriguez, O. Arrieta, L. Mas, O. Castillo-Fernandez, N. Blais, C. Martin, L. Bacon, A. Ramos-Esquivel, M. Cuello, L. Rojas, M. Juárez, A.F. Cardona
- Abstract
Background:
Eventhough lung cancer remains a disease of a median age at diagnosis of 70y, a proportion of patients are diagnosed at 40y or younger. Patients diagnosed before the age of 40 tend to be never-smokers, are stage IV adenocarcinoma, and tend to have an EGFR activating mutation or a EML4-alk translocation. It is crucial to determine the epidemiological characteristics of patients younger than 40y. Our study groups the largest population of patients less than 40y diagnosed with NSCLC.
Methods:
In this epidemiological retrospective study, 249 patients (Argentina=6, Canada=19, Colombia=29, Costa Rica=9, Mexico=89, Nicaragua=2, Panama=19, and Peru=76) with a histologically confirmed NSCLC aged 40 years or less at diagnosis were included. Data included age, gender, histology, stage, EGFR and alk mutation analysis, and date of death or last follow-up. Progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were also recorded.
Results:
NSCLC patients aged 40 years or less accounted around a 4% of the total NSCLC population. Median age was 34.5 years (range 14-40), 137 (55%) were women, and 192 patients (77.1%) were non-smokers. Adenocarcinoma was the most frequent histological subtype with 203 patients (81.6%) and 24 patients (9.6%) were squamous. 214 patients (85.9%) were stage IV and 23 patients (9.2%) were stage III at diagnosis. The site(s) of metastasis was obtained in 203/214 stage IV patients where 39.9% (n=81) had lung, 35.6% (n=72) had SNC, and 31.7% (n=64) had bone metastasis. EGFR mutation (EGFRm) analysis was determined in 103 patients with 40 patients (38.8%) having an EGFRm. EML4-alk analysis was determined in 165 patients with 11 patients having a positive translocation (6.7%). The OS for all patients was 14.4 months (95%CI=11.2-17.6), PFS was 5.7 months (95%CI=4.9-6.5), and there was no significant difference according to histological subtype. OS for EGFRm(+) was 42 months (95%CI=30.8-54.0) and for EGFRm(-) was 19.4 months (95%CI=14.8-24.0) (p=0.002); PFS for EGFRm(+) was 11.9 months (95%CI=6.3-17.5) and for EGFRm (-) was 7.1 months (95%CI=5.3-8.9) (p=0.005). OS for alk(+) was 28.0 months (95%CI=15.4-40.6) and for alk(-) was 10.6 months (95%CI=6.9-14.3) (p=0.065).
Conclusion:
NSCLC patients aged 40 years or less constitute a small but important proportion of patients with this diagnosis. Other risk factors may be involved in the pathogenesis of the disease in this population due to a low smoking history found. SNC metastasis at diagnosis seems to be more frequent in this population. EGFR mutation and EML4-alk translocation frequency is higher than the frequency reported in the general population.
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P1.01-017 - The Dramatic Shift of Lung Cancer toward Young in Prisons (ID 5149)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Renault, E. Pradat, E. Perrot, C. Bartoli, L. Greillier, A. Remacle-Bonnet, N. Telmon, L. Molinier, J. Mazières, S. Couraud
- Abstract
Background:
Although prisoners could be at higher risk for lung cancers, very few studies focused on that particular population. In a previous cohort study (Carbonnaux et al. Oncology 2013;85:370–377), we found an early onset of lung cancer in imprisoned patients. The aim of the CARCAN study was to assess epidemiological characteristics, management, prognosis and incidence of lung cancer among prisoners compared to general population.
Methods:
We designed a multi-centric observational case-control study. Cases were lung cancer diagnosed in prison in 3 penitentiary medical units (PMU) of France from 2005 to 2013 (Lyon / Marseille / Toulouse). Up to 3 controls were selected for each case from hospital databases. Controls were randomly matched to cases for center, sex, and year of diagnosis. Overall and age-specific cumulated incidences were calculated in the penitentiary area covered by the 3 participating PMU and in the French population using national statistics.
Results:
Overall, 170 controls and 72 cases met the inclusion criteria and were analyzed. Cases were mainly men (99%). Mean age at diagnosis was 52.9 (±11.0) in prisoners and 64.3 (±10.1) in controls patients (P<10-4). Most of prisoners were current smokers compared to controls (83% vs 53%; P<10-4). We did not find significant difference in histologic type or TNM stage at diagnosis between the two groups. Also, there was no significant difference in first-line treatment type in both groups; especially there was no difference in the rate of patient undergoing supportive care only. Median time from first symptoms to first treatment was 3.3 months [2.7-3.9] in controls compared to 3.6 months [2.7-4.4] in prisoners (P=0.947). We found no significant difference in progression free and overall survival between the two groups. Cumulated incidence (2008-2013) in men was dramatically increased in prisons in each age category compared to the French incidence. Incidence was 4.5 fold higher in prisons than in the general population among 30-40 years old peoples; 3.4 fold higher in 40-50 yo and 1.4 fold higher in 50-60 and 60+ yo categories.
Conclusion:
There is a dramatic shift of lung cancer toward young peoples in prisons. However, presentation, management and prognosis are similar in prisoners compared to controls. These finding should justify a specific screening policy in that high-risk population.
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P1.01-018 - Tobacco Use and Perceptions about Cessation Training among Health Professions Students: Estimates by Countries and WHO Regions (ID 3911)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.T. Sreeramareddy, N. Ramakrishnareddy, M. Rahman
- Abstract
Background:
Health professionals play an important role in cessation and prevention of tobacco use by providing a brief counseling or even a simple advise to their patients. Smoking habit among health professionals themselves may deter them from providing cessation advice and counseling to their patients. Using GHPSS data, we aim to provide updated global, regional, country-level estimates on prevalence tobacco use among medicine, dentistry, nursing and pharmacy students and describe their attitudes towards tobacco cessation training.
Methods:
The Global Health Professions Student Survey collects data on cigarette smoking and use of other tobacco products, training received to provide patient counselling on cessation techniques etc. We analysed country-wise aggregate data on current cigarette smoking’ (smoking cigarettes ≥1 days during the past 30 days), and ‘current use of tobacco products other than cigarettes’ (chewing tobacco, snuff, bidis, cigars, or pipes ≥1 days during the past 30 days), indicators on ‘health professionals’ role’ and ‘cessation training’. We calculated aggregate rates for each World Health Organization regions using ‘metaprop’ command in Stata-11.
Results:
In 236 surveys from 2005 to 2011 from 70 (medical), 56 (dental), 56 (nursing) and 54 (pharmacy) countries 107,527 students (68,809, girls and 37,886 boys) were surveyed. Overall, in all courses smoking was highest in Europe (20%, medical to 40%, dental students) followed by the Americas (13%, pharmacy to 23%, dental students). Other tobacco use rates were higher in the eastern Mediterranean (10-23%) and Europe (7-13%) countries. Tobaccco use among female students was lowest in Asian and African countries. In countries survyed ≥70% of students agreed that medical professionals are role models and have a role in advicing and information about smoking cessation to their patients and public. In the countries surveyed in all the regions, only about 9.2-36.9% of students (except 80% among dental students in the eastern Mediterranean) reorted that they have received formal training on smoking cessation approaches. and ≥80% of all students agreed they should receive a formal cessation training.
Conclusion:
Health professions students ready to receive cessation training. Tobacco control experts should work with medical educators to discourage tobacco use among health professional students and implement integrated smoking cessation training into their medical curricula. Implications: Our results provide a global snapshot and regional estimates of tobacco use among health professions students and cessation training. Results highlight the need for cessation advice/assistance to health professions students currently using tobacco and the need for introducing cessation training particularly in developing Afro-Asian countries.
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P1.01-019 - Integration of Tobacco Cessation Counseling in a Lung Screening Program (ID 6323)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P.L. Franklin, A. Gladfelter, M.E. Meek, M.A. Steliga
- Abstract
Background:
In the lung screening population, the prevalence of lung cancer is typically a small percentage (2.3% (10/440) in our institution’s program). A much more common, treatable, and potentially overlooked condition in the lung screened patient population is nicotine addiction. The National Lung Screening Trial contained 49% current smokers. A review of our lung cancer screening program showed 70.2% (309/440) of patients were active smokers at the time of lung screening.
Methods:
Our lung screening program is designed so that all scheduling would be done by a coordinator who is a Nurse Practitioner and a Certified Tobacco Treatment Specialist. A telephone call to schedule the scan was done by the coordinator and basic tobacco cessation intervention was integrated into every call. Futher follow up as face-to-face counseling was offered. We reviewed institutional data to determine what proportion of active smokers would agree to individualized counseling when it would be conveniently offered at the point of the scan, by the person coordinating the program.
Results:
Over a consecutive 26 month period, 440 patients underwent lung screening. The majority of patients (70.2%, 309/440) were actively smoking. Telephone intervention reached 100% (309/309). The telephone intervention consisted of an Ask, Advise, Refer strategy which offered further resources including: a quitline referral, a weekly group counseling session referral, and an indepth personal counseling session which would be provided at the time and place of the screening scan. The same tobacco treatment specialist who provided telephone intervention, met face-to-face with 80.6% (249/309) of active smokers for in depth counseling and development of a cessation plan.
Conclusion:
Our lung screening program detected lung cancer in a minority of participants (2.3%, 10/440) but encountered nicotine addiction in the majority of participants (70.2%, 309/440). Positioning Certified Tobacco Treatment Specialists as coordinators of lung screening programs ensure that all participants receive at minimum a telephone intervention. The initial telephone intervention coinciding with scheduling the screening scan allowed a relationship to develop between the patient and the coordinator (who is tobacco cessation specialist). Most participants who were smoking (80.6%, 249/309) agreed to in depth counseling which was conveniently provided at the point of service with the screening scan. Without integration of the resources, few patients would have sought out cessation counseling. As lung screening will recur annually, this will provide longitudinal support. Further data about acceptance of counseling and data about long term cessation in a lung screening program will be gathered.
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P1.01-020 - Chemopreventive Effect of Catechin Hydrates against Benzo(a)Pyrene Induced Lung Carcinogenesis in Mice: Plausible Role of ALDH1 (ID 3759)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Shahid, S. Sultana
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is a devastating disease with a poor prognosis. Chemoprevention has came out as a very promising protective strategy against cancer and numerous natural compounds in diet have shown their curative potential on lung cancer. Catechin is mainly found in green tea and possess anti-oxidative, anti-inflammatory and antiproliferative activity. The present study was designed to investigate the mechanism-based chemopreventive nature of catechin hydrate (CH) against B(a)P induced lung carcinogenesis in Swiss albino mice and possible role of aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1).
Methods:
B(a)P was administered orally (50 mg/kg body weight) twice a week for four successive weeks to induce lung cancer in mice. CH was supplemented to mice at doses of 20 and 40mg/kg b. wt. The body weight, lung weight, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), lipid peroxidation (LPO), xanthine oxidase (XO), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), antioxidants armory activities (SOD, CAT, QR, GPx, GR, GST and GSH) were estimated. Further, histopathological analysis of lung tissue and Immunohistopathology analysis of ALDH1, VEGF, PCNA, NF-kB, COX-2, caspase-3 and Bcl-2 were also carried out
Results:
Administration of B(a)P resulted in increased XO, LPO, LDH, and CEA with subsequent decrease in activities of tissue anti-oxidant armory. It also resulted in up-regulation of VEGF, PCNA, NF-kB, COX-2, caspase-3 and down regulating Bcl-2. ALDH1 expression was also increased in B(a)P-induced lung cancer group. Pre-treatment with CH at a dose of 20 and 40 mg/kg b. wt. significantly decreased in XO, LDH, LPO, CEA and increased anti-oxidant armory. Moreover, assessment of protein expression revealed that CH pre-treatment effectively regulated hyperproliferation, inflammation and apoptosis in lung of mice. Immunohistochemical analysis also revealed that CH pre-treatment showed significantly reduced in ALDH1 expression. Further, the antiproliferative effect of CH was confirmed by histopathological analysis.
Conclusion:
Overall, Our findings suggest that catechin hydrate inhibits B(a)P-induced lung tumor formation by modulating hyperproliferation, inflammation, apoptosis and ALDH1 expression.
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P1.01-021 - The Impact of Smoking Status on Overall Survival in a Population-Based Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) Surgical Resection Cohort (ID 5732)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N.R. Faris, Y. Lee, M.B. Meadows, M.P. Smeltzer, M.A. Ray, K.D. Ward, C. Fehnel, C. Houston-Harris, R.U. Osarogiagbon
- Abstract
Background:
Surgical resection is the optimal treatment modality for NSCLC, while smoking has been shown to have a negative survival impact. We evaluated smoking’s impact on overall survival within a population-based cohort of patients with surgically-resected NSCLC.
Methods:
We examined all patients who had a curative-intent NSCLC resection from 2009-2016 in 4 contiguous Dartmouth Hospital Referral Regions of the US. We compared patient and clinical characteristics among never, former (stopped >1 year prior), and active smokers using the Chi-square and ANOVA tests. Survival analyses were conducted with the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox Proportional Hazards models.
Results:
Of 2,202 patients, 206 (9%) were never, 846 (38%) were former, and 1,150 (52%) were active smokers. Significant demographic and clinical differences between cohorts included age, sex, race, insurance, comorbidities, pulmonary function, method of detection, ASA status, extent, primary site and length of resection, histology, and histologic grade (all p<0.05). Short-term post-operative mortality (at 30-, 60-, 90-, 120-days) rates for never smokers were 1%, 2%, 4%, 4%; for active smokers, 4%, 6%, 7% and 8%; and for former smokers, 5%, 7%, 9%, and 11%; and differed significantly by smoking status (p=0.0539, p=0.0316, p=0.0187, p=0.0017). At 5 years, overall survival was 69% for never smokers, 55% for active, and 49% for former smokers (p=0.0002) (Figure 1). Controlling for age, sex, race, insurance, histologic grade, extent of resection, and length of surgery, and compared with never smokers, active smokers had 1.3 times (p=0.05) the hazard of death and former smokers had 1.4 times the hazard of death (p=0.04). Figure 1
Conclusion:
In this population-based cohort, smoking is negatively associated with post-operative mortality and long-term overall patient survival; although active smokers had better survival outcomes than former smokers.
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P1.01-022 - Smoking Cessation Related to Lung Resection (ID 4583)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): B. Sarana, I. Benno, P. Kibur, R.T. Kibur, T. Kütt, M. Raag, T. Laisaar
- Abstract
Background:
Smoking cessation interventions are often ineffective, although negative health effects of smoking are well established. However, evidence suggests that diagnosis of a severe medical condition or a surgical intervention may force people to quit smoking without any counseling. Aim of this study was to determine the smoking cessation rate among patients undergoing lung resection and factors associated with perioperative smoking cessation.
Methods:
All lung resection patients in one thoracic surgery department in 6 years were included. A phone-interview was conducted with all (accessible) patients aged > 16. Wilcoxon rank-sum test, and chi-squared or Fisher exact test were used for statistical analysis.
Results:
In 6 years 970 patients were operated on; 406 (229 male, 177 female; mean age 56.4 [range 16 to 85] years) were available for the study. At the time of surgery 155 patients (38.2%) were non-smokers, 82 (20.2%) ex-smokers, and 169 (41.6%) current smokers. 56.3% of males and 22.6% of females were smokers (p<0.0001). 145 patients had lung cancer and 261 patients other causes for lung resection, with different smoking distribution in these 2 groups (p<0.0001). Sixty nine patients (40.8%) quit smoking before the operation: 22 due to the planned operation, 23 due to the newly diagnosed disease, and 24 for other reasons. Seventy two patients (42.6%) did not smoke after hospital discharge including 66 (39.1%) also a year later. An additional 40 (23.7%) patients had tried to stop, and 57 (33.7%) continued smoking. The quit rate was higher among lung cancer patients versus others (uncorrected p=0.007), and patients operated through thoracotomy versus VATS (uncorrected p=0.0295); and was not influenced by age, gender or duration of smoking before quitting.
Conclusion:
Almost 40% of patients undergoing lung resection stopped smoking without special counseling, with very few restarting. Smoking cessation rate was higher among patients with lung cancer and patients operated through thoracotomy.
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P1.01-023 - Smoking Cessation before Initiation of Chemotherapy in Metastatic Non-Small Lung Cancer: Influence on Prognosis (ID 5610)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Linhas, S. Campainha, S. Conde, A. Barroso
- Abstract
Background:
The association between cigarette smoking and lung cancer mortality is well known. Some studies have shown a decreased overall survival (OS) in early stage non-small cell carcinoma (NSCLC) patients that continue to smoke after diagnosis. It is documented that in patients with metastatic disease, continued smoking increases resistance to systemic therapies but the impact of smoking cessation during treatment on outcomes for these patients is not well defined. Objective: To evaluate the impact of smoking cessation, before initiation of chemotherapy (CT), on survival in advanced NSCLC.
Methods:
Patients referred to our centre, between January 2010 and June 2016, and diagnosed with metastatic NSCLC were analysed. Patients defined as smokers at diagnosis and treated with at least one cycle of chemotherapy were included. Clinical characteristics and survival outcome were reviewed and compared between patients who quit smoke before and after the initiation of chemotherapy.
Results:
A total of 113 patients were included [mean age 59±10 years; 89.4% (n=101)]. The histological type more predominant was adenocarcinoma (70.8%) and the most common sites of metastasis were lung, bone and brain (35.4%, 23.9% and 23%, respectively). The majority of patients had performance status 1 and no weight loss at time of diagnosis (53.1% and 58.4%, respectively) and the comorbidity most prevalent was hypertension (19.5%). The average number of cigarettes smoked was 51±23pack-years and 81.4% of patients smoked >30pack-years. The most used CT regimen was platinum combined with pemetrexed (63.7%). Patients who quit smoking before CT showed a better median OS although not statistical significant (8 vs. 7 months; p=0.478). This was also seen in heavy smokers ≥30 pack-years, with a median OS of 8 vs. 6.5 months (p=0.674). The multivariate analysis only showed an influence of type of CT on survival.
Conclusion:
Although not significant differences in OS between groups were observed in our sample, the median survival was better in patients that quit smoking before the initiation of CT, even in heavy smokers. Continued smoking after CT initiation is known to adversely affect treatment response and quality of life and efforts to encourage smoking cessation even among this population of patients should be made.
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P1.01-024 - University Students' Perceptions about Effectiveness of MPOWER Policies on Tobacco Control in Panama City Panama (ID 5485)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): O. Castillo-Fernandez, M. Lim, Y. Pereira, D. Bellido, O. El Achtar, L. Montano, R.I. Lopez
- Abstract
Background:
Tobacco use is a leading preventable cause of disease, disability and death worldwide. To expand the fight against the tobacco epidemic, WHO has introduced the MPOWER package of six proven policies:1.- Monitor tobacco use and prevention policies, 2.- Protect people from tobacco smoke, 3.- Offer help to quit tobacco use 4.-Warn about the dangers of tobacco 5.-Enforce bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, and 5.-Raise taxes on tobacco. The aim of this study was to evaluate the student´s perception about the effectiveness of each intervention.
Methods:
Students from public and private universities in Panama city were surveyed. Students were asked to evaluate each policy in a binary answer (less effective or very effective). Chi squared test was used to compare answers between smokers and never smokers
Results:
302 students answered the questionnaire: 157 females (52%) and 145 males (48%). Median age was 21 years. There were 73 smokers (24.2%) and 229 never smokers (75.8%). Median age of start smoking was 16 years (10-25), median of cigarettes per week was 6 (1-48). There were not discrepancies in effectiveness between the two groups in monitoring tobacco use policies (p=0.31). 56% of never smokers and 28% of smokers considered that protect people from tobacco smoke is very effective (p<0.001). Offer help to quite tobacco is considered very effective in 31% of smokers versus 52% of never smokers (p=0.003). To require effective package warning labels is very effective in 24.6% of smokers and 48% of never smokers (p<0.0001). Implement counter-tobacco advertising is equally effective for half of both groups (p=0.06). To obtain free media coverage of anti-tobacco activities is very effective in 53% of never smokers and 32% of smokers (p= 0.002). To enforce bans on tobacco advertising promotion and sponsorship is very effective in 46% of never smokers and 52% of smokers (p=0.34). Increase tax rates for tobacco products and ensure that they are adjusted periodically to keep pace with inflation and rise faster than consumer purchasing power is very effective for 46% of smokers and 57% of never smokers (p=0.09). Strengthen tax administration to reduce the illicit trade in tobacco products did not show difference in effectiveness of both groups (p=0.15).
Conclusion:
MPOWER policies are useful to prevent smoking. The perception of the effectiveness of each intervention varies according tobacco use.
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P1.01-025 - Mass Media and Tobacco in Bangladesh: An Investigation on the Role of Mass Media in the Light of Tobacco Control (ID 3893)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Sadeque, K. Ahmed
- Abstract
Background:
The tobacco epidemic is one of the biggest public health threats the world has ever faced.Tobacco used is a widespread phenomenon in Bangladesh and that causes numerous deaths and disabilities in a year. The studues conducted elsewhere have strengthened the evidence that mass media campaigns conducted in the context of comprehensive tobacco control programs can promote quitting and reduce smoking as well as smokeless tobacco prevalence.Awareness building campaigns in mass media against tobacco use should be prioritized more and this paper will be an initiative towards enhancing mass media's role in controlling tobacco in Bangladesh.
Methods:
This is a qualitative study and both primary, as well as secondary data were used where information gathered through the Key Informant Interviews (KIIs) and media contents. The employees of media houses (five national papers, two online news portals and six TV channels) were selected as study respondent. Media Content Analysis is used through the broad range of ‘texts’ from transcripts of interviews and discussions along with the materials like reports, footages, advertisements, talk-shows, articles etc.
Results:
The study result documented several opinions of discussants where Mass media was found to play a strong role in support of the amended tobacco control law and its implication that could be created public support against tobacco farming, exposing to companies’ tactics and other tobacco control activities. The study results also revealed that in controlling tobacco supply and demand effectively, media has been assisting the government and anti-tobacco activities productively. Majority of the Key Informants opined spontaneously on tobacco control program publicity, organizational interference, and influence of other activities on media. They also emphasized role of media for activities of anti-tobacco organizations, awareness building actions, popularization of tobacco control law and its amendment.
Conclusion:
The study shows evidence that mass media coverage of tobacco control issues is influencing the context of comprehensive tobacco control programs. To reduce tobacco consumption, along with strict enforcement efforts, media should be used to assist with the implementation of the tobacco control law. A sustained nationwide campaign to educate the masses against the dangers of smoking and smokeless tobacco is needed and media can play an important role in creating further awareness about the dangers associated with tobacco consumption.
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P1.01-026 - Tobacco Use, Awareness and Cessation among Malayali Tribes, Yelagiri Hills, Tamil Nadu, India (ID 4838)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D.L. Francis
- Abstract
Background:
Health is a state of complete wellbeing free from any discomfort and pain. Despite remarkable world-wide progress in the field of diagnostic, curative and preventive medicine, still there are large populations of people living in isolation in natural and unpolluted surroundings far away from civilisation, maintaining their traditional values, customs, beliefs and myths. India has the second largest tribal population of the world next to the African countries. About half of the world’s autochthonous people live in India, thus making India home to many tribes which have an interesting and varied history of origins, customs and social practices. The present study was conducted to assess the tobacco use, awarness and its effect on health among Malayali tribes, Yelagiri Hills, Tamil nadu, India.
Methods:
The inhabitants of the 14 villages of the Yelagiri hills, who have completed 18years and residing for more than 15years present on the day of examination and who were willing to participate in the study were included. Data was collected from a cross-sectional survey, using a Survey Proforma, clinical examinationand a pre-tested questionnaire which included Demographic data, tobacco habits. An intra-oral examination was carried out by a single examiner to assess the Oral Health Status using WHO Oral Health Surveys – Basic Methods Proforma (1997).SPSS version15 was used for statistical analysis.
Results:
Results showed that among 660 study population, 381(57.7%) had no formal education. Among the study population 75%) had the habit of alcohol consumption. Of those who had the habit of smoking, 26% smoked beedi, 10.9% smoked cigarette, 65% chewed raw tobacco, 18% chewed Hans and 28% had a combination of smoking and smokeless tobacco usage. The reason for practicing these habits were as a measure to combat the cold, relieving stress and body pain after work, and the lack of awareness of the hazards of the materials used. Prevalence of oral mucosal lesions in the study population was due to tobacco usage and alcohol consumption and lack of awareness regarding the deleterious effects of the products used.
Conclusion:
From the results of this study it may be concluded that the Malayali tribes were characterized by a lack of awareness about oral health, deep rooted dental beliefs, high prevalence of tobacco use and limited access to health services.
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P1.01-027 - Increased Risk of Lung Cancer among Women with Superficial TCC: A Potential Risk Cohort for Lung Cancer Screening (ID 5585)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Y. Tolwin, E. Rosenbaum, N. Peled
- Abstract
Background:
Background: Screening for lung cancer is recommended among heavy current or former smokers at age 55-80. Transitional Cell Carcinoma of the Bladder (TCC) and lung cancer share same risk factors, however the existence of TCC is not indicated as a reason for screening for lung cancer. Patients with invasive TCC undergo full staging and therefore lung cancer is usually detected if it co-exists. However, in superficial TCC, lung evaluation is not routinely done and may be missed. Here, we have studied the incidence of lung cancer among low stage bladder cancer patients aiming to evaluate if this can be defined as a population at risk.
Methods:
Methods: The SEER (Statistics, Epidemiology and End Results) database was used to determine the Incidence and standardized incidence ratio (SIR), and the average time to discovery of lung cancer in Patients with localized TCC of the bladder (AJCC 6 stages T~0~ through T~1a2~) in years 2000-2013, stratified by age and gender, and compare them to the SIR for all solid tumors.
Results:
Results: based on 89691 patients (F:M ratio 1:3.3), the SIR for all solid tumors was 1.95[CI95%:1.87-2.04] for women and 1.87[1.83-1.9] for men. The SIR for lung cancer in women was significantly higher, 2.40[2.19-2.62], with significance persisting among all age groups >50y. The SIR for men was 1.81[1.73-1.9], not significantly different from the risk for all solid tumors in any age group. The median latency period until discovery of lung cancer was 5.41, 3.54, 2.74 and 0.08 years in women, and 4.41, 3.59, 2.96 and 0.96 in men, for age groups 50-59, 60-69, 70-79 and 80+, respectively.
Conclusion:
Conclusion: Incidence of lung cancer is higher in localized TCC patients than among the general population, and among women it appears to be significantly higher than the general risk of solid tumors. Early stage TCC patients may therefore stand to gain from lung cancer screening, and should be considered as potential screening candidates.
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P1.01-028 - High Risk Older Smokers’ Perceptions, Attitudes and Beliefs About Lung Cancer Screening (ID 6244)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.K. Cataldo
- Abstract
Background:
The US Preventive Services Task Force recommends that smokers aged 55-80 should be screened annually with low dose computed tomography (LDCT). Successful implementation of lung cancer screening depends on being able to reach high-risk individuals. This study identified demographic, smoking history, health risk perceptions, knowledge, and attitude factors of older smokers related to LDCT agreement. Using binary logistic regression we produced a predictive model of factors to explain LDCT agreement.
Methods:
As part of a larger Tobacco Attitudes and Beliefs Study, we conducted a cross-sectional, national, online survey of 549 older (≥ 45 years) current and former smokers. Univariate differences between groups for agreement and non-agreement for LDCT was conducted. Using all variables that demonstrated a significant association with LDCT agreement, a binary logistic regression analysis was conducted to predict agreement to have an LDCT.
Results:
Almost 80% of the sample believed that a person who continues to smoke after the age of 40 has at least a 25% chance of developing lung cancer and if asked, 79.4% would agree to a LDCT. Using Chi Square analyses, nine variables that were significant at the 0.10 level were selected for inclusion in model development. Four of the independent variables made a unique statistically significant contribution to the model: Believes that early detection of lung cancer will result in a good prognosis; Perceives accuracy of LDCT as an important factor in the decision to have a LDCT scan; Believes that they are at high risk for lung cancer; and Believes that a negative LDCT result would decrease worry without encouraging continued smoking.
Conclusion:
Older smokers are aware of the risks of smoking, are interested in smoking cessation, and most are interested in and positive about LDCT. Cognitive aspects of participation in screening are key to increasing the uptake of lung cancer screening and smoking cessation among high-risk smokers.
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P1.01-029 - Personal and Hospital Factors Associated with Limited Surgical Resection, In-Hospital Mortality and Complications in New York State (ID 5359)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): W. Lieberman-Cribbin, B. Liu, E. Leoncini, R. Flores, E. Taioli
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer represents 13.4% of all newly diagnosed US cancers and 27.1% of all cancer deaths. Early stage lung cancer is generally treated with surgical resection. Many patient- and hospital-level factors influence the selection of appropriate surgical procedures and their outcome. We identified patient- and hospital-level characteristics influencing the type of lung cancer surgical approach utilized in New York State and assessed in-hospital complications and mortality.
Methods:
Patients were selected from the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System, SPARCS (1995-2012) based on ICD-9-CM codes of diagnosis (162 and 165) and procedures (32.0-32.9). Surgery was categorized into: limited resection (LR: 32.2-32.3), lobectomy (L: 32.4), and pneumonectomy (P: 32.5-32.6). Statistical analyses were performed in SAS v9.4 and ArcMap v10.3.1.
Results:
There were 36,460 patients (age 60-75 years); 56% underwent L, 37% LR, and 7% P. LR patients were more likely to be older (OR~adj~ 1.01, 95%CI [1.01-1.02]), female (OR~adj~ 1.10 [1.06-1.15]), Black (OR~adj~ 1.24 [1.15-1.34]), with comorbidities (OR~adj~ 1.10 [1.04-1.16]) than L patients. Opposite trends were observed among P patients, except for race. Over time, the odds of P decreased, while those of LR significantly increased (OR~adj~ 1.22 [1.16-1.29] for years 2007-2012 vs 1995-2000). Teaching hospitals were less likely to perform LR over L (OR~adj~ 0.82 [0.75-0.88]), while the opposite was true for hospitals with larger surgery volumes (OR~adj~ 1.07[1.03-1.11]). In-hospital complications were significantly less after LR than L (OR~adj~ 0.66 [0.62-0.69]), while in-hospital mortality was similar (OR~adj~ 0.93 [0.84-1.03]). In-hospital mortality was directly associated with age, length of stay, urgent/emergency admission, and inversely associated with female gender, private insurance, and surgery volumes. Figure 1
Conclusion:
There is a growing trend towards LR, which is still more likely to be performed in older patients with co-morbidities. In-hospital outcomes were affected by patients’ clinical and personal characteristics, and were better after LR than L or P.
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P1.01-030 - Factors Associated with Margin Positive Resections for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) in the Mid-South Region of the US (ID 5076)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Y. Lee, M.P. Smeltzer, N.R. Faris, M.A. Ray, C. Fehnel, C. Houston-Harris, M.B. Meadows, P. Levy, C. Mutrie, B.A. Wolf, L. Deese, L. Wiggins, V. Sachdev, S. Signore, E.T. Robbins, R.U. Osarogiagbon
- Abstract
Background:
Incomplete resection of NSCLC has a negative impact on survival. We evaluated risk factors associated with positive margins within a comparative observational population-based cohort study.
Methods:
We analyzed curative-intent resections from 2009-2016 from 4 contiguous Dartmouth Hospital Referral Regions in 3 US states. Statistical analyses were preformed using univariate and multiple logistic regression models.
Results:
Among the 2,275 NSCLC-resected patients, 52% were male, 78% white, 45% Medicare insured, and 36% privately insured, with a median age of 67 years. Factors associated with a higher margin positivity rate included male sex, large cell histology, undifferentiated tumor grade, neo-adjuvant therapy, clinical stage IIIA and IIIB, bilobectomy extent of resection, patients with abnormal diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide (DLCO), use of bronchoscopic biopsy for diagnosis greater than 1 day before surgery, left lung resection, and tumor size >7cm (all p<0.15, Table 1). American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, prior lung cancer, smoking status, Charlson score, FEV1, PET/CT, brain scan, bone scan, mediastinoscopy, blood transfusion, and hospital were not associated with positive margins in univariate analyses (all p>0.15). Controlling for sex, histology, tumor grade, tumor size, neo-adjuvant therapy, clinical stage, extent of resection, DLCO, pre-operative bronchoscopic biopsy, and primary resection site in the multiple variable analysis, sex (p=0.0134), clinical stage (p<0.001), extent of resection(p=0.0461), DLCO (p=0.0431), and bronchoscopic biopsy (p=0.0029) were independently associated with risk for positive margins (Table 1).
Conclusion:
This detailed evaluation in a large regional cohort indicates patient-level characteristics are associated with positive surgical resection margins. Our recently published evaluation of the National Cancer Database also identified institutional factors that impact the rates of positive margins. Patient-level, surgeon-level, and institutional-level factors should be considered jointly to fully understand factors impacting margin positivity rates. Figure 1
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P1.01-031 - Does Malignant Pleual Mesothelioma (MPM) Behaviour Differ among Decades? (ID 6210)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F.M.A. Abou Elkasem, M. Rahoma, I.L. Abou El Khir
- Abstract
Background:
MPM is extremely aggressive and has a long-latency period. Hence, detected at advanced stages resulting in an unfavorable prognosis(1-2years). However,MPM prognosis has been improving over the past few years with availability of better diagnostic and treatment regimens. We aim to compare clinico-pathologic characteristics of old-MPM cases referred to National Cancer Institute(NCI)-Cairo university between( 2002-2003)and new MPM cases(2012-2015)
Methods:
Retrospective review of MPM cases presented to NCI..Data regarding demographics, histology, symptoms and signs, tumor staging and CT-findings were obtained from all patients’ records. Pearson's Chi(X2)and Fisher's Exact t-tests were used for statistical analysis.
Results:
1)Old cohort(n=100): 100 patients were encountered. Median age was 46years.Males were 59% of cases. 30% has PS1. Asbestos exposure was documented in 74cases. 44cases were smokers, 25cases were industrial-workers. Family history was positive in 12cases.Dyspnea was the presenting symptom in 92cases,chest pain in 83% and tuberculous pleuritis in 2 cases, effusion in all cases, pleural thickening in 80%,tracheal shift to the opposite-side in 23%, T2 represented 41%. Epithelioid subtype 46.6%. Pathological T2= 34%. 2)New cohort(n=194): 194 patients were encountered.Median age was 53 years.Males and females were nearly equally distributed. Epithelioid subtype was 63.4%. Rt-sided lesions were evident in nearly two-thirds of the cases.Pleural thickening was nodular in 131(69.7%)cases. Inter-lobar fissure was thickened in 29.4%. Mediastinal Pleura was affected in 37.1%. Nearly,half of our cases had effusion.Ossification & calcification were detected in 8(4.1%) cases. Contraction of hemithorax was identified in 77(39.7%)cases. Chest wall invasion(CWI)was present in 18(9.3%) cases. Pulmonary nodules were detected in one-fifth of the cohort. Metastases were detected in 9(4.6%)cases(Figure).Figure 1
Conclusion:
By comparing both groups, we found that more lymph node involvement(N+), less metastasis(M+),older median age,more females, more epithelial subtype, less pleural effusion presentation, more pleural thickening were detected in group 2(new cases) reflecting better staging ( mediastinoscopy& PET-CT),early detection, more incidence in females and better treatment modalities.
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- Abstract
Background:
Although lung cancer patients frequently require emergency medical care due to acute unbearable symptoms and life‑threatening conditions, there are limited data on them at the emergency departments (ED). National Emergency Department Information System Database (NEDIS) collects information about ED visits in Korean population. We aimed to determine the frequency and main causes of emergency consultations and the predicting factors for hospital admissions and deaths.
Methods:
In this retrospective observational study, we reviewed all the cases of ED visit for six months, from July 2014 to December 2014, in three university hospitals: Hanyang University Hospital and Chung-Ang University Hospital in Seoul, and Chungbuk National University Hospital in Cheongju. By reviewing all the medical records including NEDIS database, we identified cases with lung cancer and performed descriptive statistics and logistic regressions analysis.
Results:
Of all 62,369 ED visits, there were 292 ED visit (0.5%) by 216 patients with lung cancer. Among them, 76.4% had only one ED visit in study period. The main reasons for consultation were respiratory symptoms (36.8%) and fatigue/alteration of the general state (12.7%), and pain (12.4%). ED visit leads to hospital admission in 74.9% and hospital death in 25.1% of lung cancer patients. In multivariate analysis, the main independent predictor factors of hospitalization are diagnostic phase of lung cancer (odd ratio 9.3) and the transfer from another hospital (odd ratio 4.9). The palliative phase with best supportive care alone (odd ratio 5.2) and abnormal heart rate at the time of ED visit (odd ratio 2.4) are statistically associated with death during hospitalization.
Conclusion:
Our study shows that ED visit is a frequent but clinically important event for patients with lung cancer. We might consider certain risk factors indicating hospitalization and death in lung cancer patients visiting ED to improve delivery of quality cancer care.
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P1.01-033 - EGFR Mutation and ALK: Are Patients Being Adequately Tested in Brazil? (ID 5818)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Lopes, M.F.E. Simões, O. Braghiroli, E. Prado
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is one of the most common malignancies in the world. In Brazil, it is estimated that 28,200 new cases will be diagnosed in 2016. This cancer affects more men and is usually caused by tobacco exposure. The most common histology is adenocarcinoma and many of these patients have driver mutations which help guide therapeutic choice. The aim of this study was to delineate the epidemiological profile of patients with NSCLC in Brazil and to evaluate the prevalence of testing for ALK translocations and EGFR mutations in patients in the public and private settings in Brazil.
Methods:
Observational, descriptive, retrospective, multicenter study involving 230 public and private institutions in Brazil. We obtained data from a commercial database with 1642 Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) patients treated in the country between January and December 2015. Variables analyzed: age, sex, smoking, presence of EGFR and ALK mutation.
Results:
Out of 1642 patients, 814 were treated in the public service (49.57%) and 828 in private services (50.42%). Most patients were men (58.28% vs. 41.71% female). The mean age at diagnosis was 61.8 years (median 62 years), 32.58% were former smokers, 31.12% current smokers, 19.48% never smoked and data were not available for 16.8% of subjects. Most patients had metastatic disease at diagnosis (65.04%), 23.20% had stage III, 9.31% stage II and 2.43% stage I. 68.57% had adenocarcinoma, 27.52% squamous cell cancers, 1.4% large cell and 2.67% had other histological types. Among the 534 patients with non-squamous histology treated in public settings, 244 patients were tested for EGFR (46,69%) and only and only 36 were tested for ALK (6,74%).In private services, of 656 patients with non-squamous subtypes, 454 were tested for EGFR (69,2%) and 77 for ALK (11,73%).
Conclusion:
Overall, testing for EGFR mutations was below ideal, especially in the public setting. More worryingly, and likely due to the lack of availability of crizotinib in Brazil until 2016, very few patients were tested for ALK translocations in 2015. Much work needs to be done in education and advocacy to improve testing patterns in the country.
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P1.01-034 - ECOG Scale of Performance Status in Lung Cancer at the First Consultation at a National Cancer Institute in a Developing Country in Latin America (ID 4548)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.J. Ayala Leon, C.V. Gauna Colás, M.A. Agüero Pino, M. Ayala León
- Abstract
Background:
This article reviews ECOG scale values at the first consultation in our Institute, we review demographic and other related variables. ECOG at first consultation is related to treatment options.
Methods:
Between January 2004 and December 2013, all patients diagnosed with a pathology of SCLC and NSCLC at National Institute of Oncology at Paraguay were analyzed retrospectively. ECOG performance status, were recorded. SPSS 20 was used to analyze.
Results:
We studied 478 subjects. At age mean 60,40 [95% CI 59,45 to 61,34] years and ECOG performance status mean 2,13 [95% CI 2,06 to 2,20] points. Frequency of ECOG was to 2: 48.1%, to 3:31.3%, to 1: 19 %, to 4:1.1%, to 0: 0,6% of our population. Place of living predominant ECOG at Rural place: ECOG 2: 50%, ECOG 3: 30.6%. At Urban places ECOG 2:44.9% and ECOG 3:32.4% (P>0.05) ECOG and occupational relation was unemployed ECOG 2: 54.2%, Other professions ECOG 2: 46.9% , Farmers ECOG 2: 43.3,6% , homemakers ECOG 3: 50% (P= 0.008). Most of patient were smokers ECOG 4: 100%, ECOG 2: 86%, ECOG 3: 81%, ECOG 1: 76,1%, (P=0,000). Clinical severity and ECOG relation was predominant at ECOG 0 to Stage IIIB:66.7% and ECOG 1 to Stage IIIB:43.5%. And predominant at ECOG 2 was Stage IV: 54.7%, ECOG 3 and 4 was Stage IV: 60%, both (P=0,000). ECOG 1: 33,8% accept to chemotherapy ,ECOG 2: 46.6% Reject any treatment, ECOG 3: 43.9% Reject any treatment, ECOG 4: 40% accept to radiotherapy (P=0,000). Non-Small cell carcinoma predominant ECOG 2: 48.2% Small cell carcinoma: predominant ECOG 2: 48.1%(P>0.05).
Conclusion:
Our mean ECOG was 2.13 but predominance in our populations is ECOG 2 with 48% and ECOG 3 with 31%. Prevalence of ECOG 2 and 3 at first consultation was found at Rural and Urban Places. Statistical significance was found at work and ECOG performance with prevalence to ECOG 2 except to homemakers who had prevalence to ECOG 3. Association with smoking prevalence was ECOG 4 at first consultation. Is important to conclude that at ECOG 0 and 1 clinical stage IIIB was predominant and to ECOG 2 to 4 was clinical stage IV, which shows relation between clinical severity and ECOG performance, but multivariate analysis will be required. Relation between treatment show a high rejection to treatment at ECOG 2 and 3. With this analysis we need to seek a logistic regression model to search relation with ECOG performance and other variables.
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P1.01-035 - Trends, Patterns of Treatment and Outcomes in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) as a Second Primary: A National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) Analysis (ID 6185)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Behera, T. Gillespie, Y. Liu, Y. Jia, K.A. Higgins, C. Steuer, N. Saba, D. Shin, S. Pakkala, R.N. Pillai, T.K. Owonikoko, W. Curran, C.P. Belani, F.R. Khuri, S.S. Ramalingam
- Abstract
Background:
The prevalence of NSCLC as a second primary tumor has been increasing over the past decades, though very little data are available in the literature. We analyzed the NCDB, an oncology outcomes database administered by the American College of Surgeons and the American Cancer Society, to study the outcomes and patterns of treatment of patients (pts) diagnosed with NSCLC as a second or subsequent primary (SP).
Methods:
The NCDB was queried from 2004 to 2012 for NSCLC pts. Pts diagnosed with NSCLC as SP were compared with pts with de novo (DN) NSCLC as defined by sequence number in the database. Univariate (UV) and multivariable analyses (MV) with overall survival (OS) were conducted by Cox proportional hazards model. Kaplan-Meier plots were produced to compare the survival curves by subgroups along with log-rank p-values.
Results:
A total of 207,518 pts in SP and 697,709 pts in DN groups were included in the analysis, which accounted for 22% and 74% of all NSCLC pts respectively. Pt characteristics (SP/DN %): median age 72/68, male 53/53, white 89/84, stage IV 28/41, treated at academic centers 33/32, government insured 72/57, mean tumor size (cm) 3.5/4.4. An increasing trend in incidence of SP was observed (19.5% in 2004 to 24% in 2012) vs. a decreasing trend in DN (75.6% in 2004 to 73% in 2012). About 12% in SP and 15% in DN received chemotherapy as part of their treatment. Surgery was performed in 39% of SP group vs. 28% in DN. Radiation was given to 43% of the pts in DN vs. 36% in SP. On UV and MV analysis, SP was associated with better survival than DN (HRs 0.84 and 0.93 respectively; p<0.001). The SP group had higher 5-year OS (23% vs. 19.6%, p<0.001) and a higher median survival (17 vs. 11.5 months) compared to DN. On stratifying by stage, DN had inferior survival in stage IV pts (HR 1.12, p<0.001) compared to SP but better survival in stage I and II pts (HRs 0.86 and 0.93, p<0.001). No difference in OS was seen in stage III pts (HR 1.01, p= 0.4).
Conclusion:
The incidence of second primary has increased over the past decade. Second primary NSCLC is diagnosed at an earlier stage, smaller tumor size, and is associated with a better survival, compared to de novo NSCLC.
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P1.01-036 - Lung Cancer Screening Program Is Cost Effective in French Setting: A Model Based Study (ID 5054)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C. Chouaid, J. Vella-Boucaud, J.C. Pairon, A. Duburcq, B. Detournay, L. Boyer, B. Housset, P. Andujar, I. Monnet
- Abstract
Background:
The National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) showed that screening with low-dose computed tomography (CT) as compared with chest radiography reduced lung cancer-mortality. There is no data's on the faisability and cost-effectiveness of CT lung cancer screening program in the French setting.
Methods:
We estimated mena life-years gaineds, costs and incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for screening with low-dose CT compare to no screening. Estimations of life-years gained were based on the efficacy of NLST trail applied to the general french population using the same inclusion criteria's that NLST trail (age of 55 to 74 years with a minimum of 30 pack-years of smoking and no more than 15 years since quitting) adjusted to sex, age and smoking status. Costs were limited to directs costs from the payers perspective. We also performed sensitivity analysis based on several asssumptions of program efficacy.
Results:
The target population was 5 551 141 subjects. Compared with no screening, screening with low-dose CT, over a period of 2 years, will have an additional cost of 941 978 €, will provide 52.4 additional year of life with a corresponding ICER of 17 969 € per year gained. Sensititiviy analysis showed that this result is sensitive to program efficacy (number, stage and survival of lung cancer diagnosed by the program) and to subjects compliance rate to the program.
Conclusion:
Cost effectiveness of CT lung cancer screening program in a French population using the same main inclusion criteria and outcomes of NLST trial appears as acceptable from the french health system
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P1.01-037 - Baseline Demographics and Comorbidities of Patients with Advanced NSCLC Compared to the General Population from Two Regions in Sweden (ID 4908)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S. Linden, A.M. Banos Hernaez, J. Reding, J. Nilsson, N. Justo, J. Montonen, P. Verpillat
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men and the third most common in women. However, detailed analyses of patient newly diagnosed with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in routine clinical care, compared to the general population, is limited.
Methods:
This non-interventional study is based on existing data from the population-based national Swedish Cancer Registry. All adult patients diagnosed with advanced NSCLC between 2006 and 2013 receiving care in the regions of Skåne and Västra Götaland counties (about 37.6% of NSCLC patients in Sweden) were included and matched (1:4) by age at diagnosis, gender and region of residence to a sample from the general population (controls). In- and outpatient visit data was extracted from regional databases in order to assess prevalence of selected baseline comorbidities detected in the year before diagnosis.
Results:
In total, 4,758 patients with advanced NSCLC were identified and matched to 18,996 controls. At the date of the initial NSCLC diagnosis, the median age was 69.0 (range 22-97; 96.2% above 50), and 52.7% were men. The stage of disease was IIIb in 19.8% (n=944) or IV in 80.2% (n=3,814) of the patients. When specified, adenocarcinoma was the most frequent histology (70.4%) followed by squamous cell carcinomas (25.4%). A total of 50.9% of the NSCLC patients had recorded morbidities in the year preceding the diagnosis compared to 34.8% of the controls (Odds Ratio (OR) 1.94; P<0.001)). Patients with advanced NSCLC had significantly more often (P<0.001) respiratory disorders (16.4% vs. 3.2%; OR 6.02), infections (13.4% vs 6.1%; OR 2.37), anaemia (3.4% vs. 1.7%; OR 2.08), musculoskeletal disorders (3.7% vs. 2.5%; OR 1.51), and cardiovascular disease (27.8% vs. 22.7%; OR 1.31). No significant difference was observed in prevalence of gastro-intestinal disorders, metabolic disorders or skin disorders. Regarding disorders of the central nervous system, while depression was more frequently present among NSCLC patients (3.8% vs. 2.8%; OR 1,38) dementia was more prevalent among controls (0.6% vs. 1.2%; OR 0.48). As expected, brain metastasis was diagnosed overwhelmingly more for NSCLC patients (53 cases, vs. 2 cases; OR 107.0).
Conclusion:
The present study suggests that patients diagnosed with advanced NSCLC have a significantly higher morbidity burden than the general population in these regions in Sweden.
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P1.01-038 - Prognosis Value of Body Mass Index (BMI) and Weight Loss at Diagnosis in Primary Lung Cancer: Results of KBP-2010-CPHG Study (ID 4373)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Debieuvre, H. Morel, B. Raynard, J. Oster, A. Bizieux, A. Lévy, J. Mathieu, P. Dumont, É. Leroy-Terquem, B. Asselain, F. Blanchon, M. Grivaux
- Abstract
Background:
We studied the relationship between 1-year mortality and weight at diagnostic in 6,965 adult patients followed for primary lung cancer in 104 general hospitals.
Methods:
Patients were classified into 5 groups: Group 1, underweight with recent weight loss; Group 2, underweight without recent weight loss; Group 3, normal weight; Group 4, overweight; Group 5, obese. Kaplan-Meier method (1-year mortality) and Cox multivariate analysis (independent risk-factors) were used.
Results:
Respectively, 11%, 4%, 45%, 29%, and 12% of patients belonged to Groups 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. One-year survival was lower in Group 1 (27% [24%-30%]) and higher in Group 4 (50% [48%-52%]) or 5 (53% [50%-57%]) than in Group 2 (47% [41%-53%]) or 3 (43% [42%-45%]) (Fig. 1). As compared with normal weight, overweight was an independent protective factor. Independent protective/risk factors are presented in Table 1. Interaction analyses showed that overweight was a significant independent protective factor for stage IIIA and IIIB cancer (HR=0.77 [0.6-0.99], p=0.038; HR=0.75 [0.59-0.97], p=0.029, respectively). Figure 1Variable HR 95%CI P BMI (group) 3 1 1 1.06 0.96-1.17 0.26 2 1.03 0.85-1.23 0.789 4 0.92 0.85-0.99 0.036 5 0.9 0.81-1.01 0.061 Age (years) <=40 1 41-50 1.07 0.74-1.54 0.714 51-60 1.02 0.72-1.46 0.899 61-70 1.05 0.74-1.49 0.796 71-80 1.11 0.78-1.59 0.553 >80 1.54 1.07-2.22 0.02 Sex Men 1 Women 0.81 0.74-0.88 <0.001 Smoking Never-smoker 1 Former-smoker 1.19 1.06-1.35 0.004 Current-smoker 1.27 1.13-1.44 <0.001 PS PS0 1 PS1 1.58 1.45-1.73 <0.001 PS2 2.66 2.4-2.95 <0.001 PS3 5.6 4.95-6.34 <0.001 PS4 10.61 8.62-13.05 <0.001 Stage <=IIB 1 IIIA 1.89 1.61-2.21 <0.001 IIIB 3 2.56-3.52 <0.001 IV 4.71 4.13-5.38 <0.001
Conclusion:
In 2010, in France, in real life conditions, 1-year survival was low in lung cancer patients with low BMI at diagnosis and recent weight loss. Overweight appeared to be a protective factor in particular for stage IIIA and IIIB cancers.
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P1.01-039 - Does Distance between Chest and Surgery Departments Impact Outcome in Lung Cancer Patients? Results of KBP-2010-CPHG Study (ID 4585)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Debieuvre, V. Frappat, S. Dehette, J. Crequit, M. Carbonnelle, P. Barre, D. Coëtmeur, F. Goupil, O. Molinier, M. Grivaux
- Abstract
Background:
We studied the impact of the distance between chest and thoracic surgery departments on the outcome of patients followed, for primary lung cancer diagnosed in 2010, in the chest department of 104 French general hospitals participating in KBP-2010-CPHG study.
Methods:
6,083 patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) participated in this study. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify independent factors for surgery and 1-year mortality. Distance from the usual thoracic surgery department in 2010 was collected for each chest department and included in the model as a 4-class variable: 0 km (same hospital), 1-34 km, 35-79 km, and ≥80 km.
Results:
Overall, 23% of hospitals had a thoracic surgery department; otherwise, mean distance between the hospital and the surgical center was 65 km. 1,157 patients (19%) were operated on; vital status was known for 5,876 patients (97%). Distance was not an independent factor for surgery and for mortality. Independent factors for surgery and mortality are presented in Tables 1 and 2. Table 1- Surgery (multivariate analysis: adjusted odd-ratios)
Table 2- Mortality (multivariate analysis: adjusted hazard-ratios)OR 95% CI p Distance (km) 0 1 1-34 0.97 [0.74-1.27] 0.833 35-79 0.88 [0.66-1.18] 0.399 >=80 1.02 [0.78-1.32] 0.91 Age (year) Continuous 0.95 [0.94-0.96] <0.001 Stages IV 1 I 248.18 [172.48-357.11] <0.001 II 155.78 [107.70-225.32] <0.001 IIIA 34.23 [24.80-47.25] <0.001 IIIB 2.33 [1.40-3.89] 0.001 Histology Adenocarcinoma 1 Squamous-cell carcinoma 0.77 [0.61-0.96] 0.023 PS PS0 1 PS1 0.58 [0.47-0.71] <0.001 PS2 0.12 [0.08-0.17] <0.001 PS3 0.08 [0.04-0.16] <0.001 PS4 0.07 [0.02-0.32] <0.001 HR 95% CI p Distance (km) 0 1 1-34 1.02 [0.94-1.11] 0.661 35-79 1.00 [0.91-1.10] 0.985 >=80 1.01 [0.93-1.09] 0.887 Age (year) Continuous 1.01 [1.01-1.01] <0.001 Sex Men 1 Women 0.86 [0.80-0.94] <0.001 Stages IV 1 I 0.15 [0.13-0.18] <0.001 II 0.29 [0.25-0.34] <0.001 IIIA 0.41 [0.37-0.46] <0.001 IIIB 0.65 [0.58-0.72] <0.001 PS PS0 1 PS1 1.58 [1.45-1.73] <0.001 PS2 2.79 [2.52-3.09] <0.001 PS3 5.75 [5.11-6.48] <0.001 PS4 10.2 [8.52-12.20] <0.001 Smoking Never-smoker 1 Former-smoker 1.18 [1.05-1.33] 0.005 Current-smoker 1.33 [1.18-1.49] <0.001
Conclusion:
In 2010, the absence of an on-site thoracic surgery department did not impair outcome in NSCLC patients managed in the chest departments of French general hospitals.
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P1.01-040 - Long-Term Survival in Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: An Investigation Using Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Data (ID 4466)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E. Szabo, E. Prophet, H. Peng, H.Y. Lee, S. Chang, J.S. Davis
- Abstract
Background:
The introduction of new effective modalities for the treatment of metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), such as targeted therapies and immunotherapy, has resulted in reports of long-term survival in small sub-groups of patients treated with these therapies. It is therefore important to understand the frequency and characteristics of long-term survivors in large cohorts of advanced-stage lung cancer patients who were diagnosed and treated prior to the advent of these new therapies.
Methods:
A survival analysis of data from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results database was performed. The cohort was limited to patients diagnosed with stage IV NSCLC, squamous and adenocarcinoma histology only, between 1991 and 2007, with follow-up through 2012. Outcomes and factors associated with extended survival were evaluated in the 10% of patients with longest survival (long-term survivors, ≥21 months) vs. 90% short-survival patients (< 21 months). Patients surviving ≥ 5 years were compared with those surviving <5 years and ≥21 months. Demographic, tumor characteristic, and treatment differences between long-term and short-survival patients were compared using chi-square and Student’s T-test for categorical and continuous variables, respectively. For descriptive analyses unadjusted for confounders, Kaplan Meier curves and log-rank tests were used to compare survival by histology and long-term survival status.
Results:
Among the 44,387 patients diagnosed at stage IV, long-term survivors (4,544) are distinguishable from short-survival patients (39,843) by younger age, female sex, Asian/ Pacific Islander race, lower tumor grade, adenocarcinoma histology, upper lobe site, and treatment with surgery. Among only long-term survivors (≥ 21 months), predictors of longest survival are younger age, lower tumor grade, and treatment by surgery and radiation. Median survival increased over time from 3 to 4 months for short-survival patients versus 30 to 36 months for long-term survivors. Notably, 1.5% of patients survived >5 years even prior to modern combination chemotherapy regimens, targeted therapies, and immunotherapy.
Conclusion:
Despite the poor overall survival of patients diagnosed with stage IV NSCLC, the top 10% of survivors have significantly longer survival than the rest and a sub-population of individuals with extraordinary survival is identifiable. The discrepancy in median survival between long-term survivors and the rest suggests that long-term survivors comprise a disproportionate percentage of clinical trial participants and provides a rationale for more detailed clinical and molecular analyses in order to improve therapeutic targeting and future study design.
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P1.01-041 - Quantitative Imaging Features Predict Response of Immunotherapy in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients (ID 5729)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): I. Tunali, J.E. Gray, J. Qi, M. Abdullah, Y. Balagurunathan, R.J. Gillies, M.B. Schabath
- Abstract
Background:
Although immunotherapy has revolutionized the field of cancer treatment, response rates are only ~20% in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients and cost of this therapy is high. Predictive biomarkers are needed to identify patients likely to benefit. Converting digital medical images into high-dimensional data (‘Radiomics’) contains information that reflects underlying pathophysiology and that can be revealed via quantitative analyses. We extracted radiomic imaging features from baseline CT scans (prior to initiation of immunotherapy) and identified features that predict response to immunotherapy in NSCLC patients. This work is an initial test of the hypothesis that radiomic data may predict who will respond favorably and who will not.
Methods:
We curated a subset of data and images from 13 different institutional immunotherapy clinical trials. Patients were stage III/IV NSCLC and received PD-1, PD-L1, or doublet checkpoint inhibitors. All target nodules were identified on the CT prior scan prior to initiation of immunotherapy. RECIST guidelines 1.1 were used to measure patient response from baseline to last follow-up scan. Based on last follow-up, 43 patients had progressive disease (PD) and 28 patients with partial response (PR) or complete response (CR). Since we focused on extreme responses, stable disease (SD) patients were not included in the current analyses. We extracted 219 radiomic features including size, shape, location, and texture information from a total of 210 target nodules (lung, lymph nodes, or other). Backward-elimination analyses were utilized to generate parsimonious radiomic models associated with objective responses (PD vs. PR/CR) and post estimation computed performance statistics.
Results:
There were no significant differences for the patient characteristics between patients with PD vs. CR/PR. Analysis of the radiomic features for all target nodules to differentiate PD patients vs. PR/CR patients resulted in a final model containing 2 features that provided an AUROC of 0.64 (95% CI 0.56–0.72). When we analyzed features for only lung target nodules, we identified a final model with 4 features that produced an AUROC of 0.79 (95% CI 0.68–0.89). When we analyzed the imaging features for lymph node target nodules, we found that a final model with 1 feature yielded an AUROC of 0.67 (95% CI 0.51–0.82).
Conclusion:
Radiomic features of lung target nodules have better performance statistics for predicting response to immune therapies compared to target nodules from other organ sites. With this model, cutoffs can be chosen to reduce non-responders with high confidence. Change feature analyses following therapy are underway.
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P1.01-042 - Molecular Epidemiology of Programmed Cell Death 1-Ligand 1 (PD-L1) Protein Expression in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 4746)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.B. Schabath, T. Dalvi, H.A. Dai, A.L. Crim, A. Midha, N. Shire, J. Walker, D. Greenawalt, D. Lawrence, J. Rigas, R. Brody, D. Potter, N.S. Kumar, S.A. Huntsman, J.E. Gray
- Abstract
Background:
Expression of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients might identify patients who would benefit from PD-L1 blocking antibodies. In a retrospective cohort of NSCLC patients, we characterized PD-L1 expression and other biomarkers to determine if PD-L1 expression is a prognostic biomarker and whether patient characteristics could be identified to determine those associated with high expression.
Methods:
This was a retrospective analysis of 136 NSCLC patients diagnosed between 1997 and 2015 with stage IIIB and IV disease and treated at Moffitt Cancer Center and affiliated institutions. All patients had at least 2 lines of standard of care chemotherapy and sufficient archival tumor tissue for PD-L1 testing by the Ventana SP263 validated assay and mutation status testing by targeted DNA sequencing with the TumorCare Panel. High PD-L1 expression was defined as ≥ 25% of tumor cells with membrane positivity for PD-L1 at any intensity above background staining. Statistical analyses were performed comparing PD-L1 expression by patient characteristics. Survival analyses were performed using Kaplan-Meier survival curves and the log-rank statistic. All statistical tests were two-sided; P-value of less than .05 was considered statistically significant.
Results:
Of the 136 tissues tested for PD‐L1 expression, 116 (85.3%) were collected by surgical resection and 20 (14.7%) were collected by biopsy. Mean sample age was 7.2 years (SD=2.8 years). 82 of the 136 samples also underwent targeted DNA sequencing. In this patient cohort, 51.5% were male, 83.1% were ever smokers, 90.4% were White, 39% were stage IV at time of tissue collection, 71.3% had adenocarcinoma, 28.7% had four or more lines of therapy, and 24.2% had high-expression for PD‐L1. There were no statistically significant differences with respect to PD-L1 expression for patient characteristics, overall survival (OS), or progression-free survival (PFS). Additionally, there were no statistically significant differences with respect to PD-L1 expression by EGFR (WT/PD-L1<25% = 74.4% vs. WT/PD-L1≥ 25% = 88.5%), KRAS (WT/PD-L1<25% = 74.7% vs. WT/PD-L1≥ 25% = 69.2%), and ALK status (Neg/PD-L1<25% = 98.5% vs. Neg/PD-L1≥ 25% = 100%). However, mutation load (total number of non-synonymous mutations) was statistically significantly correlated with PD-L1 expression (correlation coefficient = 0.23; P = 0.03).
Conclusion:
In this study of NSCLC patients treated with 2 or more lines of standard of care chemotherapy, PD-L1 expression (high vs. low and as a continuous covariate) was not statistically significantly associated with OS or PFS. We did observe a novel positive correlation between PD-L1 expression and mutational load.
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P1.01-043 - Comparison of Gender, Race Distribution, and Survival in the 1990s to 2010s in Lung Cancer Patients at a Single Institution (ID 4678)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): B. Laderian, D. Saravia, A. Laderian, A. Ishkanian, M. Jahanzeb
- Abstract
Background:
In the United States, lung cancer occurs in about 225,000 patients and causes over 158,000 deaths annually. Due to a shift in smoking patterns between the genders that started decades ago, the incidence of lung cancers appeared to have shifted accordingly. Thus, we analyzed our institutional data as described below.
Methods:
This is a retrospective study that compares two populations of lung cancer patients in two different five-year periods a decade apart: one from 1996 to 2000 consisting of 1355 lung cancer patients and the other from 2011 to 2015 consisting of 2220 lung cancer patients from our institutional tumor registry data. We included lung cancers that have been associated with smoking such as adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and small cell lung cancer. The two populations were compared in category of gender; race and marital status were also included to examine any major population shifts during these time periods. Crude survival at two-year follow up period was also examined. The results were analyzed using Excel as well as Matlab. This project is IRB approved.
Results:
From 1996 to 2000, the percentage of male population with lung cancer associated with smoking was 63%. This number decreased significantly to 51% in the period 2011-2015 (p-value < 0.00001). The percentage of African American patients in 1996-2000 was 14% and decreased to 11% in 2011-2015 (p-value 0.0039). The number of divorced patients increased from 8.1% to 11% (p-value 0.0025). The number of widowed patients decreased from 12.3% to 9.8% (p-value 0.0096). For patients with stage IV lung cancer diagnosed from 1996 to 1998, the crude survival rate at 2-year follow up was 17%, which increased to 29% in patients diagnosed from 2011 to 2013 (p-value < 0.00001).
Conclusion:
Our results demonstrate that the proportionate incidence of lung cancer in males has decreased significantly from the late 90s to the early 2010s. The change in race and marital status, while statistically significant, is less dramatic. The percentage of African American population has also decreased significantly. The crude survival rate at 2 year follow up for those with stage IV lung cancer significantly increased. While this could, in part, be due to stage migration, a real prolongation due to improvements in systemic therapy is likely. More attention should be drawn to the fact that nearly twice as many women die from lung cancer compared to breast cancer, for a more proportionate support of research efforts.
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P1.01-044 - Accelerometer-Determined Physical Activity and Sedentary Time among Lung Cancer Survivors (ID 4673)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. D'Silva, G. Bebb, T. Boyle, S. Johnson, J. Vallance
- Abstract
Background:
Physical activity is an effective way to positively influence health outcomes among cancer survivors. Few studies have examined physical activity and sedentary behaviour among lung cancer survivors. Further, these studies have used self-report measures of physical activity, which may bias results (e.g., overestimation) and lead to incorrect conclusions. Only one study to date has reported on objectively-assessed sedentary behaviour among lung cancer survivors. The primary aim of this currently ongoing study is to determine the prevalence of objectively-assessed physical activity and sedentary time among lung cancer survivors.
Methods:
Lung cancer survivors in Southern Alberta diagnosed between 1999 and 2014 are currently being recruited to participate. Eligibility criteria include: confirmed non-small cell lung cancer, completed treatment, and not living in hospice/palliative care. Consenting participants wear an Actigraph[®] GT3X+ accelerometer on their hip for seven days. Time spent sedentary, in light and in moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity are derived from the accelerometer data and processed using 60-second epochs. Physical activity and sedentary behaviour accumulated in 10 minute and 30 minute continuous bouts will be examined.
Results:
Recruitment began in June, 2016. A total of 660 survivors were invited and 113 have agreed to participate. Of the 374 survivors that did not respond, most indicated they were not interested (n=115). Others denied having lung cancer (n=6) or had invalid contact information (n=27). Six were deceased. Currently the response rate is 18.2%. Of the 113 that consented, eight participants withdrew due to health concerns (n=4), time constraints (n=2), and loss of interest in the study (n=2). Of the 105 participants, the median age at diagnosis was 66 years, and 72 years at recruitment, the majority were female (n=62), and 85 had a smoking history. Adenocarcinoma was the most common diagnosis (n=65). The majority of participants were diagnosed stage I (n=53) with others diagnosed at stage II (n=23), III (n=18), and IV (n=11). Overall, 65 survivors underwent a lung resection while 18 of those received adjuvant therapy. Other treatments included concurrent chemotherapy and radiation (n=11) and radical radiation alone (n=23).
Conclusion:
This study will be the first to report on objectively assessed physical activity and sedentary time among a population-based sample of lung cancer survivors. Despite inherent difficulties of this type of research (e.g., older population), the positive response rate suggests high participation interest. We expect to reach our recruitment target of 140 patients by September, 2016, with data analysis completed in November, 2016.
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P1.01-045 - Patient to Hospital Distance in Access to Care and Lung Cancer Surgical Treatment (ID 4464)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): W. Lieberman-Cribbin, B. Liu, R. Flores, E. Taioli
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer represents 13.4% of all newly diagnosed US cancers and 27.1% of all cancer deaths. Health disparties exist in accessing proper care and receving surgical treatment. We examined the role of Patient to Hospital distance (P-H) in access to care.
Methods:
Patients were selected from the New York State Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (1995-2012) based on ICD-9-CM diagnosis (162 and 165) and procedures (32.0-32.9). Surgery was categorized into: limited resection (LR: 32.2-32.3), lobectomy (L: 32.4), and pneumonectomy (P: 32.5-32.6). Distance calculations (ArcMap 10.3.1) and linear regressions (SAS v9.4) were performed to determine the factors influencing P-H.
Results:
There were 36,460 patients (age 60-75 years); 56% underwent L, 37% LR, and 7% P; 95% of patients underwent surgery at a hospital < 70 kilometres (km) from their home (mean±SD 20.49±30.24 km; median 11.10 km). P-H was shorter in LR (19.10±27.71 km) than L (21.00±30.96 km) and P (23.87±36.56 km; p < 0.001). At multivariable analysis, P-H was positively associated with teaching hospitals (β: 3.33, p < 0.001), admitted during 1995-2000 (β: 1.08, p < 0.001) and 2001-2006 (β: 1.23, p < 0.001), and P (β: 1.57, p < 0.001), and inversely associated with female gender (β: -0.49, p = 0.016), age at admission (β: -0.17, p < 0.001), black race (β: -8.22, p < 0.001), Medicaid (β: -3.37, p < 0.001), private insurance (β: -0.79, p = 0.004), rural hospitals (β: -2.80, p < 0.001), LR (β -0.81, p < 0.001), and mortality (β -1.05, p = 0.081). Similar associations were found in the L subgroup; among LR patients there was no statistically signficant association between P-H and female gender. Figure 1
Conclusion:
Significant differences exist in P-H and patient/hospital characteristics, which may affect type of surgery and outcome. P-H should be incorporated to improve health disparities in accessing surgical care.
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- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is the leading cause of death of all tumors in China. But due to imbalanced development of different provinces, the surgical treatments of Non-small cell lung cancer in different areas of China diverse. The Chinese National NSCLC outcome registry was founded in 2013, which covers 17 provinces across China. We analyze the data of 5060 NSCLC patients retrieved from this registry to reveal the imbalanced circumstances.
Methods:
Data of stage I-III patients were obtained from the NSCLC surgical outcome registry, which included 5060 patients who underwent lung resection surgeries from 17 tertiary hospitals nationwide in 2013-2014. Baseline data , surgical treatment pattern parameters, pathology, number of lymph nodes dissected, and total hospital costs. Heterogenity of quantitative data was analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis test.
Results:
Among the 5060 patients, the mean age was 59.7 , while 3204 were male. Mean pre-op forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) was 2.23L(P<0.01), FEV1/FVC was 81.8%(P<0.01). 64.6% patients combined with at least one comorbidity. The average diameter of the tumor was 3.28cm(P<0.01). Mean operation time was 181.2 minutes. (P<0.05).The post-operative pathology confirmed 59.8% as adenocarcinoma while 30.2% as squamous carcinoma. Based on the data submitted by different centers, 88.4%(mean,0 to 98.41) patients who were confirmed as stage III patients received adjuvant therapy before surgery(P<0.01). The rate of minimally invasive surgery was 48.1(mean, 8.1 to 94.7)% in different regions(P<0.01). The number of stations of lymph nodes harvested was 5.8(mean, 4.3 to 7.4)(P<0.05). Mean hospital cost was 55070 (mean, 43051 to 69686 ) RMB(P<0.01).Center No. of lymph nodes in lobectomy Cost(CNY) VATS% Adjuvant therapy ofStage III% No. of patientssubmitted 1 6.3 46861 90.2 99.3 838 2 6.4 52891 27.5 98.8 788 3 4.5 47516 59.0 84.8 729 4 5.6 70875 60.3 50.3 676 5 5.3 51742 78.9 98.6 392 6 7.4 65409 26.1 100 387 7 6.8 50696 8.5 100 293 8 4.8 42206 8.3 98.6 265 Total 5.9 57757 50.07 88.45 5060
Conclusion:
The heterogenity of surgical treatment is quite huge in different centers of China. The baseline status before surgery, pre-operative therapy strategy, surgical technique, and health economic data submitted to the registry showed imbalanced development of NSCLC surgical treatment in different regions of China.
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P1.01-047 - Clinical Presentation and Outcome of Neuroendocrine Lung Tumors in a Brazilian Cohort from 2000 to 2016 (ID 5778)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Corassa, V.C. Cordeiro De Lima, A.L.A. Dettino, D.R.M. Silva, T.B. De Oliveira, H.C. Freitas
- Abstract
Background:
Neuroendocrine lung tumors (NET) are rare and heterogeneous neoplasms. Typical carcinoids (TC) and atypical carcinoids (AC) have better prognosis and their treatment is mainly focused on surgery. Large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas (LCNLC) are commonly widespread at diagnosis. Here we present clinical characteristics and outcome of patients with TC, AC and LCNLC treated at AC Camargo Cancer Center (ACCCC).
Methods:
We selected 114 consecutive patients with TC, AC or LCNLC treated at ACCCC from 2000 to 2016. Demographic variables included individual data, diagnostic and treatment patters. Data was collected and processed to obtain outcomes and survival information. It was intended to obtain not only epidemiologic characteristics, but also to determine and confirm selected variables as prognostic.
Results:
Main demographic results are described in the Table below:
For the entire population, median progression free survival (mPFS) was 158.5 months. mPFS was not reached (NR) for TC and AC, with 5-year PFS 81% for TC and 84% for AC and 10-year PFS 69% for TC and 59% for AC; no Statistical Significance (SS) was found between TC and AC in mPFS (p=0,549). mPFS was worst, with SS, for age ≥65 years (158.5x61.5 months; p=0.018), staging ≥2 (NRx75.7 months; p=0,027), ECOG ≥1 (158.5x35.2 months; p=0.001), node positive disease (N0xN≥1: NRx33.9; p=0.001). Same tendencies were observed for TC, also with SS, but not for AC. Median overall survival (mOS) retained the same tendency: 5-year OS was 74% for TC and 55% for AC and 10-year OS was 74% for TC and 47% for AC. mOS was not reached. Age ≥ 65 years (p=0.001), ECOG ≥1 (p=0.001) and staging ≥ 2 (p=0.001) also were predictable for worst mOS.VARIABLES TC AC TOTAL NUMBER OF PATIENTS 64(56.1%) 24(21.1%) 88(100%) SEX MALE 53.1% 41.7% 45.5% FEMALE 46.9% 58.3% 54.5% MEDIAN AGE YEARS 56.35 53.74 57.48 CLINICAL STAGING I 83.9% 55.0% 76.8% II 4.8% 20.0% 8.5% III 6.5% 0.0% 4.9% IV 4.8% 25.0% 9.8% ECOG 0 71.7% 84.6% 76.4% ≥1 20.3% 15.4% 25.4% COMORBIDITIES YES 56.9% 65.2% 59.3% NO 75.4% 66.7% 73.1% SMOKING HISTORY YES 24.6% 33.3% 26.9% NO 75.4% 66.7% 73.1% OTHER MALIGNANCIES YES 32.8% 4.2% 25% NO 67.2% 95.8% 75% FAMILY HISTORY YES 59.4% 66.7% 61.4% NO 40.6% 33.3% 38.6% SURGERY YES 92.2% 79.2% 88.6% NO 7.8% 20.8% 11.4%
Conclusion:
This study demonstrates an epidemiologic descriptive outlook of neuroendocrine LC in a Brazilian population. Older age, worst performance and higher staging were prognostic for poor outcomes in survival.
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P1.01-048 - Factors Contributing Delays during Management of Lung Cancer: A Study from Tertiary Level Hospital in Nepal (ID 5363)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.C. Acharya, R. Pun, S. Sharma
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer related morbidity and mortality in both the sexes in Nepal. It accounts for 15.4 % of total cancer as per hospital based Cancer Registry in Nepal. Majority of patients are diagnosed and treated at advanced stage. This can be partly contributed to long lag period between the onset of symptoms and the initiation of cancer treatment. This study tries to evaluate the factor contributing delays in various steps in lung cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Methods:
This retrospective cross-sectional observational study was conducted at Department of Clinical Oncology, Bir Hospital, National Academy of Medical Sciences (NAMS), Nepal. We reviewed the record of the all registered, histologically diagnosed lung cancer patient during the year 2012 and 2013
Results:
A total of 123 patient’s were diagnosed as Lung cancer and their records were evaluated. Out of these 123 patients, 60% of the cases were males. The mean age was 63.93 years with the youngest being 35 and the eldest was 83 years. Significant number of patient was in stage III (59%) and IV (33%). About 89% of the patients were smokers. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounted 83% and small cell lung cancer was (SCLC) 17%. A total of 17% (21) of patient were on empirical Anti-tubercular treatment (ATT) since the onset of current symptoms. While analyzing delay with independent T test showed mean delay of 25.01 days (-/+ SD 6.17) in patient without ATT and with ATT delay was 57.09 days (-/+ SD 8.05) (p=<0.01). Thirty five percentage (43) of patient received treatment within 1 month from the first hospital visit, 28% (34) within two months and 37%(46) within 3-4 months of the first hospital visit. The delay in specialist visit was shorter in advanced cancer and small cell cancer may be because of the acute presenting symptoms.
Conclusion:
Various factors contributing for the delays are lag time from symptom onset to first visit with primary physician, delay due to investigation and symptomatic treatment under primary physician care, delay further aggravated by empirical but inappropriate ATT, further delay due to diagnostic procedure to establish the cancer diagnosis. Thus proper and timely referral to the specialist from primary physician will reduce these delays and help to avoid situation where curable disease become incurable and significantly alters the prognosis.
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P1.01-049 - Predictors of High Grade Toxicity of Chemotherapy among Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Patients (ID 5784)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F.M.A. Abou Elkasem, M. Rahoma, I. Abou El Khir
- Abstract
Background:
Malignant pleural mesothelioma is an aggressive thoracic malignancy associated with exposure to asbestos, and its incidence is anticipated to increase during the first half of this century. Chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment, yet sufficiently robust evidence to substantiate the current standard of care has emerged only in the past 5 years.
Methods:
A retrospective cohort study of 100 MPM patients referred to NCI, Cairo University in 3 years. Detailed data, Pearson's Chi (x2) square and Logistic regression model were used for statistical analysis.
Results:
We found a statistical significant relation between age ( 0.005), male gender (0.002), endemic area residence( 0.001), industrial workers ( 0.018), duration of exposure (0.04), smokers (0.009), Simian virus ( 0.019), P53 ( 0.001), RbP (0.001), PS ( 0.0.16) and development of high grade toxicity of platinum based chemotherapy. Median age = 46 years, only 17% of cases developed high grade toxicity complications of platinum based chemotherapy. Males were 59% of cases. PS, residence, smoking, occupation, history of asbestos exposure, family history, simian virus, P53, Rbp, dyspnea, chest pain, cough, expectoration, haemoptysis, weight loss, fatigue, metastatic symptoms, chronic lung infection, Tuberculous pleuritic, effusion, pleural thickening, Tracheal shift, TNM staging, surgical operations, pathological staging, radiotherapy ,cause of death and chemotherapy toxicity are assessed in our patients.
Conclusion:
Many factors predict high grade chemotherapy toxicity. So, search for target therapy and immunotherapy instead of chemotherapy in this selected group can improve both quality of life and response rate.
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P1.01-050 - Overall Survival in Advanced Lung Cancer Patients Treated at Oncosalud-AUNA (ID 6336)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Aguilar, C. Flores, L. Mas, J.M. Gutierrez, L. Pinillos, C. Vallejos
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer still remains as the principal death cause in many regions around the world. Unfortunate, between 60-70% of patients are diagnosed with advanced disease (clinical stage IIIB-IV). We report the overall survival of advanced lung cancer in patients treated at a private institution (Oncosalud – AUNA).
Methods:
We analyzed data of 75 patients with advanced lung cancer and treated at Oncosalud-AUNA between 2013-2014. Overall survival was determinate using Kaplan-Meier method and survival curves comparison were performed using logrank test.
Results:
The median age was 70 years (range: 39-91) and 49% of patients were women. In patients with clinical stage IV, the metastatic sites were generally brain (28%), osseous (18%), cervical and supraclavicular (14%). The 66.7% of patients received chemotherapy with/without radiotherapy, 9% radiotherapy only and 24% non-treatment. In patients previously treated with chemotherapy, 52% received targeted therapy. The 77% of patients hab died, the follow-up median of survivors was 23 months (CI95%: 17-29), survival median was 9.6 months (CI95%. 5.6-13.5) and 1 and 2 years survival rate were 38% and 23%, respectively. The survival rate at 1 and 2 years in those receiving targeted therapy ware 65% and 43%, and those who did not receive were 35% and 10%. The overall survival present a difference regarding to ECOG scale (p = 0.015) and CYFRA 21.2 (p = 0.04).
Conclusion:
Overall survival for our patients is similar to other series. Patients under ECOG scale <2 and CYFRA 21.1 < 3.3ng/ml had a relatively better prognostic.
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P1.01-051 - Predictor Variables to ECOG Scale of Performance Status in Lung Cancer at a Developing Country in Latin America (ID 4550)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.J. Ayala Leon, M.A. Agüero Pino, C.V. Gauna Colás, M. Ayala León
- Abstract
Background:
We need to understand the living quality in our population, so we review performance status focus on ECOG 3,4,5 that includes a concept of capable of limited self-care, because this increases expenses at families and health system. We need to understand the variables that increases risk of higher ECOG values.
Methods:
Between January 2004 and December 2013, all patients diagnosed with a pathology of SCLC and NSCLC at National Institute of Oncology at Paraguay were analyzed retrospectively. ECOG performance status were recorded and SPSS 20 was used to analyze with logistic Binary regression
Results:
We studied 478 subjects. At age mean 60,40 [95% CI 59,45 to 61,34 ] years and ECOG performance status mean 2,13 [95% CI 2,06 to 2,20] points. Bivariate correlations show no relation with age, gender, living place, work, smoking, alcohol consumption, histopathology of lung cancer only with motive of consultation and clinical severity. In our model of predicting a ECOG 3 to 5 adding first motive of consultation show a Nagelkerke R2: 0.14, Hosmer y Lemeshow P: 0.95. Adding to the model clinical severity Nagelkerke R2: 0.07 Hosmer y Lemeshow P: 1.0. Variables in our predicting model show at clinical severity IIB stage OR:6,62 [95% CI 1,13 to 38,52 P=0.035], clinical severity IIIA stage OR: 3.85 [95% CI 1,18 to 12.51 P=0.025],clinical severity IIIB stage OR:4,49 [95% CI 1,87 to 10,78 P=0.001]. At limited-stage SCLC clinical severity OR: 10,12 [95% CI 1,88 to 54,34 P=0.007]. At first motive of consultation chest paint OR: 3,13 [95% CI 1,38 to 7,11 P=0.006]. Cough OR: 2,30 [95% CI 1,11 to 4,76 P=0.024]. Palpable Tumoral mass OR: 8,35 [95% CI 1,65 to 42,07 P=0.010].
Conclusion:
Regardless our expectations about relation of disability of patient with lung cancer about place of living, work, gender, age this variables show no relation with ECOG at 3 to 5. In Our review we found a prediction model with clinical severity adding 7% to prognostic of limited self-care and by adding to the model first motive of consultation a 14% of prognostic of worst ECOG status. If first consultation motive is chest pain, cough or palpable tumoral mass, this are strongly related with worst ECOG values. As a conclusion most of our patients are diagnostic in advance clinical stages with a bad performance status which will limited our options to treatment. All of these can be related with a late consultation or a late detection of the disease.
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P1.01-052 - Lung Cancer Mortality in Mexico, 1990-2014 (ID 5810)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Tirado, L. RamÍrez-Tirado, O. Arrieta
- Abstract
Background:
Mortality from lung cancer ranks first in men and third in women in Mexico. We aim to assess the mortality rate from lung cancer in the Mexican population during the period from 1990 through 2014.
Methods:
In this longitudinal study we analyzed the mortality rate of lung cancer, adjusted for age, sex and degree of marginalization. The mortality rate was adjusted applying the direct method. In adittion, we used the 2010 Mexican Population,which was taken from the Population and Housing Census. Deaths were taken from the mortality database of the Ministry of Health of Mexico. The degree of marginalization of the population was made based on the marginality index established by the National Population Council, it includes five categories of marginalization: Very low, low, medium, high and very high. The 33 states of the Mexican Republic are divided into these categories, approximately being six to seven in each. Finally, the annual percentage change was calculated.
Results:
During the study period a decrease we observed a decrease in the lung cancer mortality rate adjusted for age and gender. Thus, the rate in 1990 was higher (110 deaths per 100,000 population), which decreased to 90 per 100,000 in 2014, representing a decrease of more than 15%. In relation to gender we observed a decrease in the mortality rate for both genders. In addition, the mortality rate in women was three times lower from that among men througout the whole period of study. Nonetheless, we observed a slight increasing trend for women in the last years. Regarding the marginalization index we observed that the highest mortality rates occur in the states that comprise the categories with low and very low marginalization. Moreover, decline in mortality was also observed in those categories, unlike the categories of high and very high marginalization, where a slightly increase was observed during the period of study.
Conclusion:
Mortality from lung cancer has declined during the studied period, a situation that may be due to various situations such as diagnosis at earlier clinical stages or treatments more effectively, or under registry of mortality in the states that make up the categories with high or very high marginalization. Such situations must be studied in greater depth to identify the causes for the decline in mortality from lung cancer.
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P1.01-053 - Lung Cancer in Brazil: Men and Women Differences (ID 6270)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.T. Ruiz Tsukazan, Á. Vigo, V. Duval Da Silva, A. Vieira, R.M. Rosenthal, F. Cabral, G.M. Schwarcke, J. Schmitt, M. Cimarosti, J.O. Rios, J.A. Figueiredo Pinto
- Abstract
Background:
The objective of this study was to describe the trends of histology and age of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with lung resection according to gender. The histology of lung cancer is changing in developed countries and there is still little information available for developing countries.
Methods:
Retrospective analysis of all patients (N=1030) with resected NSCLC between 1986 and 2015 in a university hospital of Southern Brazil. Differences in histology, stage and type of surgery were analyzed by sex and period (1986-1995, 1996-2005 and 2006-2015).
Results:
Most patients were males (64.5%), main histologic types were adenocarcinoma (44.5%) and squamous cell carcinoma (40.6%). Mean age at surgery was 56.5 years for women and 58.9 years for men in first period, and 62.2 for women and 64.6 for men in the last period (p<0.001), suggesting that it was approximately 2.4 years higher for men (p<0.001), in spite of the period. The proportion of histologic types were different by gender (p<0.001), showing that overall squamous cells carcinoma was more frequent in men (46.9%) than in women (29%), and the opposite occurred for adenocarcinoma (40.4% versus 51.8% for men and women, respectively). Analyses by period showed squamous cells carcinoma declined from around 38.9% in the first period to 23.2% in 2005-2015 for men, virtually equaling the proportion of adenocarcinoma in the last period. The proportion of adenocarcinoma in women increased from 11.9% in the first period to 24% in the last. Considering all NSCLC patients, females with adenocarcinoma represented 11.9% in the first and 24% in the last period. Figure 1
Conclusion:
As seen in developed countries, rates of lung cancer in females are rising over the last three decades, but have not surpassed men rates yet. Adenocarcinoma is consistently the most frequent histological type in women. In men squamous cell rate has decreased.
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P1.01-054 - Lung Cancer: Histology, Gender and Age Changes Over Past 30 Years in Brazil (ID 6286)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.T. Ruiz Tsukazan, Á. Vigo, V. Duval Da Silva, F.L. Cabral, R.M. Rosenthal, A. Vieira, J.O. Rios, J.A. Figueiredo Pinto
- Abstract
Background:
Lung is the leading death cause cancer related worldwide when considering both genders. The great effort to reduce smoking and introduce of cigarette changed lung cancer epidemiology. In developed countries the increase of adenocarcinoma and decrease of squamous cell carcinoma are well known. Other characteristic reported is the rising number of with the disease. Better understanding of current lung cancer epidemiology is necessary to design public health strategies for prevention, diagnosis and treatment.
Methods:
Retrospective analysis of all patients with non small cell lung cancer submitted to anatomical lung resection between 1986 and 2015 in an University Hospital of South Brazil. Patients were divided in three periods 1986-1995, 1996-2005 and 2006-2015. The same pathologist group made histology diagnosis and all staging was updated according to the new IASLC 7th edition. All analyses were performed using the SAS program.
Results:
In our Institution 1030 patients underwent anatomical lung resection for lung cancer between 1986 and 2015. 64.5% were males, average age 62.1 years, 40.6% squamous cell carcinoma and 44.5% adenocarcinoma, 23% advanced stage IIIA. The female proportion increased from 26.6% on first period to 44.2% on last period. Mean age at surgery treatment was 56.4 years for women and 58.9 for men on first period, and 62.2 for woman and 64.6 for men on the last period (p<0.001). The proportion of squamous cell changed from initially 49.6%, then 43% to 34.8% on the last period (p<0.001). In comparison in the same sequence we have for adenocarcinoma prevalence starting on 38.1%, 41.2% and most recently 49.5%. Stage IIIA was predominant on all periods with 23%, however early stages IA and IB combined represent 47.1% in the last group. Type of surgery was predominantly lobectomy and was verified decreasing in pneumonectomy rate.
Conclusion:
Analyses including gender showed that lung cancer in women is raising over the years but didn’t surpassed men yet. Women adenocarcinoma has increased the participation on total cases. The significant decrease of pneumonectomy reinforces the changes on surgical management technics and also correlates with more early staging diagnosis. The mean average age on surgery has increased for both men and women.
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P1.01-055 - Clinicoepidemiological Trends of Lung Cancer from a Premier Regional Cancer Centre in South India (ID 5901)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Das, A. Krishnamurthy
- Abstract
Background:
Lung Cancer is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. It is most commonly attributed to smoking; a smaller proportion is attributed to occupational exposure. However, an earlier published study by Krishnamurthy et al 2012 from the authors institute reported the increasing trends of “Nonsmoking associated lung cancers” in the Indian subcontinent. A larger prospective study aimed at validating the initial findings was planned and this formed the basis of the present study.
Methods:
All consecutive histologically confirmed patients with lung cancer who presented to the outpatient department over a year (November 2014 to October 2015) were included in this current prospective study. A comprehensive questionnaire administered by a trained social worker captured all the demographic details including age, sex, occupation, smoking habits including exposure to second hand smoke, type of cooking fuel, histopathology and stage at presentation among others. (And later analyzed by SPSS Version 22.0)
Results:
713 patients presented with clinico-radiologicaly suspicious findings of lung cancer in the said period. A pathological confirmation of lung cancer could be ascertained in 495 patients and this cohort was further analyzed. The median age of presentation was 58 years; the male to female ratio was approximately 2.5:1. 52.12 % patients were nonsmokers. Adenocarcinoma (63 %) was the predominant histology. Nonsmokers, both among men (p=0.02) and women (0.001) presented more frequently with adenocarcinoma histology. Interestingly, 84.9 % (45/53) rural and 76.1 % (19/25) urban women who were nonsmoker reported exposure to indoor air pollution (second hand smoke/fuel used for cooking purposes) which was significantly associated with adenocarcinoma histology. (p=0.01) A majority of the patients (69.1 %) presented with clinical stage IV. (7[th] edition TNM) Nearly 60% of patients presented in ECOG performance status 3-4, nonsmokers incidentally presented in a better performance status than smokers (p = 0.017). 53% of the patients unfortunately were deemed suitable only for best supportive care. Only 97 patients (19.6 %) were offered potentially curative treatment and radical surgery accounted for < 3 % of the overall management.
Conclusion:
This prospective study validated our initial observation of the increasing trends of lung cancers among nonsmokers. Further, this study also reflected the global trend of rise in adenocarcinoma histology. These findings in a larger perspective will help clinicians better understand the magnitude and the direction of the lung cancer epidemic and also aid policymakers in better channelizing the resources for effective public health interventions.
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P1.01-056 - Lung Cancer Epidemiology in Croatia (ID 3942)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R. Zorica, V. Popović, T. Božinović
- Abstract
Background:
BACKGROUND: To analyze principal histological types of lung cancer, as well as sex and the age of patients, staging, tumor location, smoking history, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) history, and survival of lung cancer patients in Croatia.
Methods:
METHODS: This was a retrospective study based on the analysis of medical charts of patients treated at the University Hospital „Split“, Split, Croatia, during 2015. and 2016.
Results:
RESULTS: From July 2015 to February 2016, 332 patients with lung cancer, most of whom (75,30%) were male, were treated. Patients were between 36 and 85 years, with median age 65,5 years. There were 273 (84,78%) patients with NSCLC (Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer) and 49 (15,22%) patients with SCLC (Small Cell Lung Cancer). The most common histological type in patients with NSCLC was adenocarcinoma (58%), followed by squamos cell carcinoma (38%), NSCLC NOS (not otherwise specified) (2%), adenosquamos carcinoma (1%) and large cell carcinoma (1%). Among patients with NSCLC 13% are EGFR positive. Patients had mostly lung cancer in right lung (59,35%), most of them were smokers (88,40%), 20,70% patients had COPD and 21,05 % patients had pleural effusion. Concerning staging, 73,80% patients had stage IIIB and IV at the time of diagnosis, and the remaining 26,20% were classified as stage I-IIIA. The principal sites of metastases were lungs (24,45%), bones (23,6%), and liver (12,9%). One-year survival was 23,21% and median overall survival was 8,82 months for patients presented with stage IIIB and IV. Median age at death was 67,5 years.
Conclusion:
CONCLUSION: In accordance with the literature most of the lung cancer patients in Croatia are men, older age (but younger compared to developed countries), the most common histological type is adenocarcinoma. Most of the patients have cancer in the right lung, most of them are smokers and minority had COPD or pleural effusion. Most cases are presented in advanced stages at the moment of diagnosis. This affects on survival rate, which is lower compared to developed countries. To increase survival rate in Croatia smoking cessation should be encouraged, lung cancer screening, diagnosis and therapy should be improved, patients should be included in clinical trials and palliative care for terminal patients should be improved.
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- Abstract
Background:
Nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has varying epidemiological patterns in different countries and also in different regions of each country. In a country with a high prevalence of lung cancer such as India, regional variations in demography exist.
Methods:
We did a retrospective analysis of histologically confirmed metastatic NSCLC patients who presented to our Department of Medical Oncology between August 2012 and July 2014. The patients were interviewed regarding their history of smoking (never smokers, light smokers, and heavy smokers). Never smokers were defined as those who have smoked <100 bidi/cigarettes in their life until disease onset. Light smokers were defined as those who smoke <10–100 bidi/cigarette pack years. Heavy smokers were defined as those who smoke more than 100 bidi/ cigarette pack years until disease. All lung cancer biopsy specimens were histologically characterized by morphology and immunohistochemistry (IHC). A diagnosis of AC was made if IHC staining was positive for CK7, TTF1, and napsin A; similarly, SCC was diagnosed if CK5/6 and p63 staining was positive. After confirmation of the histology subtype, patients were confirmed to have metastatic disease after assessment with contrast‑enhanced computerized tomography thorax, abdomen scan, and radiolabeled bone scan. Our study did not include the small cell lung cancer patients. The data were analyzed on SPSS version 22 (IBM) software.
Results:
A total of 304 patients were analyzed. About 55.6% of the patients were in the age group of 41–60 years. About 79.6% of the patients were symptomatic for <6 months before presentation. About 63.5% of the patients were smokers presenting with a median age of 59 years whereas nonsmokers formed 36.51% of the patients presenting with a median age of 47 (P < 0.001). About 82.6% of the male patients and 4.1% of female patients were smokers. Equal number of all patients had adenocarcinoma (AC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) histology. AC histology was more common in the nonsmoking group (62% of patients). SCC histology was seen in 54.3% of smokers. Metastasis to the contralateral lung and pleura was seen in 58.2% of patients.
Conclusion:
NSCLC presents at a young age. Smoking is a significant risk factor and it is common in the urban populations as in the rural areas. Both AC and SCC histologies presented in equal proportions
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P1.01-058 - Demographic Profile of Lung Cancer from Eastern India (ID 4654)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P.R. Mohapatra, S. Bhuniya, M.K. Panigrahi, S. Patra, P. Mishra, G. Pradhan, S.K. Das Majumdar, P. Behera, D. Muduly, M. Kar
- Abstract
Background:
The clinico-pathological profile of primary lung cancer has changed considerably over the last few decades in India. Available literature suggests that the features of lung cancer in India like prevalence, incidence, aetio-pathogenesis and presentation vary markedly from the west. We performed a prospective evaluation of the unique demographic features of lung cancer with specific emphasis on smoking and histopathological trends.
Methods:
We analysed all pathologically proven lung cancer cases registered over a period of initial 30 months in the department of Pulmonary Medicine of this All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bhubaneswar. The patients were evaluated for their epidemiological, clinical and pathological profiles. The data were recorded in MS Excel spreadsheets and subjected to appropriate statistical analysis. Data was collected directly from patients’ paper and electronic medical records. All patients of histologically proven lung cancer were included.
Results:
A total of 179 patients were included in the database of which 6 patients were excluded for significant missing data. There were 114 male and 59 women) average age 57.24 with a M:F ratio of 1.93 :1. Over half (56%) of the patients were active or past smokers, while 48% patients had not been exposed to active or passive smoking. Bidi (tobacco flake wrapped in tendu leaf) smoking was more common (37%) than cigarettes (19%) while 9% smoked both. Exclusive chewed tobacco use was seen in 12% while combined use of chewed and smoked tobacco was seen in 4% patients. The proportion of women never-smokers with lung cancer was significantly higher (89%) compared to men (28%). More than two-thirds patients (69.8%) presented with metastatic disease. Amongst patients with a definitive cytohistological diagnosis, the prevalence of adenocarcinomas was highest (56.3%) followed by squamous (30.8%), small cell (8%) and NSCLC NOS (4.9%).
Conclusion:
Adenocarcinoma is the commonest histological subtype in this region. Prevalence of lung cancer among non-smokers is also high in the eastern part of India. The demographic profile of patients with lung cancer in eastern India is unique with a much higher proportion of tobacco chewers and non-smoker especially in women. There is significant epidemiological trends towards a predominant adenocarcinoma histology. Most of the patients present at an advanced stage, probably due to lack of awareness and limited diagnostic resources in this part of the country. Although there are direct association with smoking, there has been an increase in the non-smoking lung cancers worldwide.
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P1.01-059 - Lung Cancer Epidemiology among the Bahraini Population, 2000-2011 (ID 5075)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N. Abulfateh, R.R. Hamadeh, M. Fikree
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries among males and the third among females. It is the commonest cancer among Bahraini males accounting to 16.9% of all cancers and the third in Bahraini females contributing to 5.8 % of all female cancers. The aim of this study was to describe the epidemiology of lung cancer among the Bahraini population during the period 1998-2011.
Methods:
All Bahraini registered lung cancer cases in the national cancer registry from 1 January 1998 to 31 December 2011 were included in the study. Incidence rates were calculated using the CANREG software, in which the annual crude incidence rates, age specific incidence rates and the age standardized incidence rate (ASR) were computed.
Results:
Six hundred sixty four lung cancer cases (72.4%, males and 27.6% females) were diagnosed during the study period. The annual average number of cases was 47.5 per year. The mean age at diagnosis during the study period was 70.1 years. The average annual ASR was 26.1/ 100,000 among males and 10.0 / 100,000 among females. There was a tendency for a decreased trend of the ASR during 1998-2011 in both sexes. Twenty six percent of lung cancer cases were squamous cell carcinoma and 17.9% adenocarcinoma. The grades of 70.3% were unknown and 13.4% were poorly differentiated. The stage was unknown for 65.0% of the cases, while 18.5% had distant metastasis and 9.8% were localized. The majority (88.9 %) of the lung cancer cases were dead by the end of the study period with a five-year survival rate of 3.0%.
Conclusion:
A welcomed decline in the incidence of lung cancer has been noted over the past 14 years. However, more efforts should be put to reduce the proportion of lung cancer cases with unknown stage and grade. The incidence of histological types, which are strongly dependent on tobacco smoking, notably small cell, squamous cell and large cell carcinomas, accounted for over one third of lung cancer cases. Future research should be directed towards better understanding of the lung cancer risk factors and the effectiveness of tobacco control measures in in the country.
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P1.02 - Poster Session with Presenters Present (ID 454)
- Type: Poster Presenters Present
- Track: Biology/Pathology
- Presentations: 87
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Hall B (Poster Area)
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P1.02-001 - Expressions of Resistance EGFR TKIs in Non Small Cell Lung CancerAt Pham Ngoc Thach Hospital - Viet Nam (ID 3747)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N.S. Lam, T.D. Thanh, N.T. Nhan, N.N. Vu
- Abstract
Background:
In the patients with NSCLC were tested for diagnostic EGFR mutation, in addition to activating mutations, such as Exon 19 Deletion & Exon 21 L858R that is occupies a large amount. The mutation is said to be resistant to EGFR TKIs occupies smaller amount. However, this is also a challenge for the care and treatment for patients with NSCLC.
Methods:
Retrospective, cross-sectional descriptive statistics, clinical case series.
Results:
PRIMARY MUTATIONS WITH EGFR TKIs RESISTANCE §Activating EGFR Mutations: Exon 19 Deletion: 356/597 cases = 59,63% and Exon 21 L858R: 176/597 cases = 29,48%. §Primary Mutations with EGFR TKIs Resistance - Single mutations: 46/597 cases = 7,71% (Male: 27 cases + Female: 19 cases), including: Exon 20 Insertion: 25 cases, Exon 18 G719X: 14 cases, Exon 20 S768i: 5 cases, Exon 20 T790M: 2 cases. §Primary Mutations with EGFR TKIs Resistance - Double mutations: 19 / 597 cases = 3,18% (Male: 11 cases + Female: 8 cases), including: Exon 21 L858R + Exon 20 T790M: 6 cases, Exon 19 Deletion + Exon 20 T790M: 5 cases, Exon 18 G719X + Exon 20 Insertion: 2 cases, Exon 21 L858R + Exon 20 G786i: 3 cases, Exon 18 G719X + Exon 20 S768i: 3 cases. ACQUIRED MUTATIONS WITH EGFR TKIs RESISTANCE §Total cases with the gene mutation diagnosis repeating again (Sampling with Histology or Cytology): 113/597 cases (18,93%). Detection rate for new resistance EGFR TKIs mutations: Number of Cases: 56 cases/113 cases (49,56%). §Distribution rate % of acquired resistance mutations in EGFR TKIs: · Exon 20 T790M (Single & Double Mutations): 28 cases (50 %) · MET Amplification: 4 cases (7,14 %) · HER2 Amplification: 13 cases (23,21 %) · Small Cell Carcinoma Transformation: 5 cases (8,93 %) · PIK3CA Mutation: 2 cases (3,58 %) · The Other Mutations: 4 cases (7,14 %) §The expression of EGFR T790M mutation: T790M Single Mutation: 14 cases; T790M + Exon 20 Insertion: 3 cases; T790M + A763V: 4 cases; T790M + L777G: 1 case; T790M + Y801C: 3 cases; T790M + G719X: 2 cases; T790M + S768i: 1 case.
Conclusion:
§ There are the expressed resistance mutations EGFR TKIs in NSCLC patients at Pham Ngoc Thach Hospital, including: Primary EGFR TKIs Resistance & Acquired EGFR TKIs Resistance. § The rate of drug-resistant mutant EGFR TKIs are small but still important issues in the Care and Treatment of lung cancer.
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- Abstract
Background:
Threonine 790 is regarded as a “gatekeeper” to inhibit ATP from binding to EGFR Tyrosine kinase domain. T790M mutation could increase the affinity for ATP. About 30% de novo T790M mutation was detected in NSCLC patients and showed spatiotemporal heterogeneity and variation in individual NSCLC patients. We hypothesize that T790M mutation may be a “regulating” mechanism for EGFR signal transduction pathway and is probably cleared quickly by DNA repair system in healthy persons.
Methods:
Peripheral blood samples were taken from 50 healthy volunteers, 12 resectable lung adenocarcinoma (LADC), 100 advanced LADC (11/100 acquired resistance for gefitinib). A novel cSMART assay (circulating single-molecule amplification and resequencing technology, which counts single allelic molecules in plasma base on next generation sequencing) was performed for detection and quantitation of EGFR mutation in ctDNA from plasma. Matching tumor biopsy samples were obtained from 100 advanced LADC, the EGFR gene mutations were determined by amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS) -PCR analysis.
Results:
The sensitivity and specificity of cSMART plasma assay for EGFR L858R, 19del and T790M was showed in Table 1. The sensitivity and specificity for T790M was obviously lower (50.0% and 72.9% respectively). No L858R and 19del but 14.0% T790M DNA copies were found in plasma from 50 healthy volunteers, and only 1 copy T790M was detected. The T790M positive rate of resectable and advanced LADC patients were almost similar (33.3% and 28.0%) in plasma, 1 or 2 T790M copies were found in the resectable patients and varied from 1 to 622 T790M copies with an average of 34.0 in advanced LADC patients. Patients with acquired resistance to gefitinib, 45.4% harbored T790M with an average of 268.2 copies in plasma. All but one advanced patients harboring T790M mutation were accompanied with other EGFR mutations.
Conclusion:
T790M mutation may be of a “regulator” and has physiological function.Table 1 EGFR mutations detection by plasma cSMART assay and tumor samples ARMS-PCR in advanced LADC patients
EGFR mutations Sensitivity Specificity L858R 91.7%(22/24) 100.0%(76/76) 19Del 79.2%(19/24) 100.0%(76/76) T790M 50.0%(2/4) 72.9%(70/96)
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- Abstract
Background:
ROS1 fusion is of a low frequency genetic alteration in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The clinical trial showed that NSCLC patients harboring ROS1 fusion could benefit from crizotinib treatment. Several studies reported that immunohistochemistry (IHC) could be employed as a screening method for detecting ROS1 fusion in tumor tissue using Anti-ROS1(D4D6) antibody. Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is the common sample type in advanced NSCLC, the reliability of ROS1(D4D6) for detecting ROS1 fusion in MPE cell blocks (CBs) should be explored.
Methods:
Anti-ROS1(D4D6) monoclonal antibody (Cell Signaling Technology, Danvers, USA) IHC testing was performed on 227 formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) MPE CBs from lung adenocarcinoma patients. RT-PCR using ROS1 fusion gene detection kit (AmoyDx) was performed to detected ROS1 gene fusion as a comfirming test. Some other lung cancer driver genes were also detected in both IHC/RT-PCR ROS1 positive samples, among which EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA and HER2 20 exon mutation was tested by amplification refractory mutation system kits(AmoyDx), ALK and RET fusion was tested by RT-PCR kits(AmoyDx).
Results:
4 of 227 MPE samples(1.76%) of lung adenocarcinoma were interpreted as ROS1 fusion-positive cases by IHC staining, and the cytoplasmic and membranous granular positive signals were displayed. Comparison with RT-PCR testing results, 3 of 4 IHC positive cases were verified by RT-PCR, the sensitivity was 100% and specificity of was 99.6%. The clinicopathologic features and other genes status of 3 both IHC/RT-PCR positive patients were showed Table 1. One ROS1 IHC/RT-PCR positive lung adenocarcinoma patient received crizotinib therapy and obtained partial response.
Conclusion:
ROS1 (D4D6) would be a reliable antibody for screening ROS1 fusion-positive lung adenocarcinoma on FFPE MPE CBs by IHC assay and shows high specificity in the FFPE MPE CBs samples .Table 1 Clinicopathologic features and genes status of ROS1 IHC/RT-PCR positive patients
E/K/B/P/H: EGFR/KRAS/BRAF/PIK3CA/HER-2 20 exon mutation, A/R: ALK/RET fusion, WT: wild type, PEM+CIS: Pemetrexed plus Cisplatin,PR: partial response, m: monthsGender Age Smoking TTF1/ P63 E/k/B/ P/H A/R Therapy Efficacy PFS/Follow -up p1 Male 55 Smoker +/- WT WT crizotinib PR 10m+/alive p2 Female 60 Never +/- WT WT No 1m/Dead P3 Male 62 Never +/- WT WT PEM+CIS PR 9m+/alive
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P1.02-004 - A Retrospective Analysis of Frequency of ALK Gene Rearrangement in Saudi Lung Patients (ID 3858)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F.H. Al Dayel, S. Mohammed, A. Tulbah, H. Al Husaini
- Abstract
Background:
Lung carcinoma represents 2.9% of cancers seen at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre (KFSH&RC) as per KFSH&RC Tumor Registry (2013), and 4% of cancers in Saudi Arabia as per National Cancer Registry (2010). EML4-ALK re-arrangement play an important oncogenic driver role in lung adenocarcinoma tumorgenesis in 3-5% of cases. ALK gene rearrangement (inversion in chromosome 2) testing can identify patients with adenocarcinoma who are sensitive to ALK tyrosine kinase inhibitors. No data is available on the prevalence of ALK rearrangement changes in Saudi lung cancer patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of ALK gene rearrangement in lung adenocarcinoma of Saudi patients.
Methods:
A total of 172 cases of lung adenocarcinoma diagnosed at KFSH&RC between January 2013 to May 2016 were identified. Formalin-fixed paraffin embedded tissue samples of these patients were analyzed for ALK gene rearrangement using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), utilizing break-apart probes from Vysis (Abott Molecular, II, USA).
Results:
Eleven (11) cases exhibited ALK gene rearrangement (6.4%). Nine out of eleven cases were stage IV and two cases were stage III. Median patients age was 47 years (21-71 year) with male predominance (males 77%, female 25%). All cases were moderately to poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. None of our cases showed signet ring cells or abundant intracellular mucin.
Conclusion:
Our findings showed the incidence of ALK gene rearrangement in lung adenocarcinoma in Saudi patients is 6.4%. This is slightly higher in comparison to the published data which may be attributed to KFSH&RC being a tertiary referral Center.
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P1.02-005 - Frequency of Actionable Alterations in EGFR wt NSCLC: Experience of the Wide Catchment Area of Romagna (AVR) (ID 3934)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E. Chiadini, A. Delmonte, L. Capelli, N. De Luigi, A. Gamboni, C. Casanova, C. Dazzi, M. Papi, S. Bravaccini, M.M. Tumedei, A. Dubini, M. Puccetti, L. Crinò, P. Ulivi
- Abstract
Background:
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-tyrosine kinase inhibitors have improved the outcome of patients with EGFR-mutated lung adenocarcinoma (ADC). However, EGFR mutation occurred in about only 10-15% of ADC, but other alterations are emerging as potential target of drugs. We analyzed the frequency of potentially targetable driver alterations in a series of advanced EGFR-wild type (wt) NSCLC patients.
Methods:
724 advanced EGFR-wt NSCLC patients enrolled from the Wide Catchment Area of Romagna (AVR) between January 2013 to December 2014 were included in the study. KRAS, BRAF, ERBB2, PIK3CA, NRAS, ALK, MAP2K1, RET and DDR2 mutations were analyzed by Myriapod[®]Lung Status kit (Diatech Pharmacogenetics) on MassARRAY[®] (SEQUENOM[®] Inc, California). ERBB4 was evaluated by direct sequencing and EML4-ALK and ROS1 rearrangements were assessed by immunohistochemistry or fluorescence in situ hybridization.
Results:
331 (45.7%) patients showed at least one alteration. Of these, 72.2%, 6.3%, 3.6%, 1.8%, 2.1% and 1.2% patients had mutations in KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA, NRAS, ERBB2 and MAP2K1 genes, respectively. Only one patient showed a mutation in ERBB4 gene. EML4-ALK and ROS1 rearrangements were observed in 4.3% and 1.4% of all patients, respectively. The distribution of mutations in relation to gender and smoking habits is reported in the Table. Overlapping mutations were observed in 7 KRAS-mutated patients: 2 (28.6%) patients were also mutated in PIK3CA, 4 (57.1%) showed also an EML4- ALK translocation and one (14.3%) had a ROS1 rearrangement. One (0.3%) patient showed both BRAF and PIK3CA alterations. Correlation analyses between the different mutations and patient outcome are ongoing.
*: some data are missingGENE Mutated Patients N (%) Gender Smoking Habits* Female (%) Male (%) Smoker (%) Never Smoker (%) KRAS 239 (33) 93 (39) 146 (61) 115 (48.1) 9 (3.8) BRAF 21 (3) 11 (52.4) 10 (47.6) 11 (52.4) 1 (4.8) NRAS 6 (0.8) 4 (66.7) 2 (33.3) 4 (66.7) - PIK3CA 12 (1.6) 4 (33.3) 8 (66.7) 5 (41.7) - MAP2K1 4 (0.5) - 4 (100) 1 (25) - ERBB2 7 (0.9) 5 (71.4) 2 (28.6) - 1 (14.3) EML4-ALK 31 (4.3) 20 (64.5) 11 (35.5) 12 (38.7) 8 (25.8) ROS1 10 (1.4) 7 (70) 3 (30) 3 (30) 5 (50)
Conclusion:
Driver mutations were detected in about 50% of EGFR wt lung ADC patients. Such alterations could represent potential targets for therapy and could be evaluated in routine multiplexed testing to obtain a wider tumor molecular characterization.
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P1.02-006 - Interlaboratory Variation in Molecular Testing (EGFR, KRAS and ALK) in Stage IV Non-Squamous Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer in the Netherlands in 2013 (ID 4112)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.C.H.J. Kuijpers, L.I.H. Overbeek, S. Rotteveel, R. Van Ommen, K. Koole, H. Van Slooten, M. Van Den Heuvel, R. Damhuis, S. Willems
- Abstract
Background:
Adequate testing for molecular changes in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is necessary to ensure the best possible treatment. However, it is unknown how well molecular testing is performed in daily practice. Therefore we aimed to assess the performance of testing for EGFR, KRAS mutation and ALK translocation in metastatic NSCLC on a nationwide basis.
Methods:
Using the Netherlands Cancer Registry, all stage IV non-squamous NSCLC from 2013 were identified and matched to the Dutch Pathology Registry (PALGA). Data on molecular testing for EGFR, KRAS and ALK were extracted from excerpts of pathology reports. Proportions of tested and positive cases were determined and interlaboratory variation was assessed. Finally, degree of concordance between ALK immunohistochemistry (IHC) and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) results was evaluated.
Results:
In total, 3393 stage IV non-squamous NSCLCs were identified, and 3183 (93.8%) were matched to PALGA. Fifty-two tumors were excluded as pathology reports described a lung tumor other than non-squamous NSCLC or a tumor with another origin, leaving 3131 tumors. All 48 laboratories had access to molecular testing, either in house or via outsourcing. The table shows the nationwide proportions of cases tested and positive for EGFR, KRAS and ALK, as well as the interlaboratory variation. EGFR and KRAS mutations occurred together in 8 patients, ALK translocation occurred together with EGFR mutation in 3 patients and with KRAS mutation in 2 patients. In 272 cases, ALK had been tested using both IHC and FISH, and the methods were conclusive in 253 cases. IHC and FISH were concordant in 239 cases (94.5%; Kappa 0.728, p=0.069), 5 discordant cases were IHC+/FISH- and 9 were IHC-/FISH+.Nationwide proportions of tested and positive cases and interlaboratory variation.
Total Tested cases; n (%) Range in tested cases between Laboratories Positive cases; n (%) Range in positive cases between laboratories EGFR 3131 2237 (71.4) 33.7% to 93.5% 243 (10.9) 6.1% to 21.6% KRAS 3131 2292 (73.2) 20.9% to 93.6% 845 (36.9) 27.0% to 48.1% ALK 3131 905 (28.9) 7.0% to 72.6% 51 (5.6) 0% to 13.6% ALK (in case of EGFR and KRAS wildtype) 1227 685 (55.8) 19.4% to 100%
Conclusion:
These results suggest that in 2013 molecular testing was suboptimal in the Netherlands, especially for ALK. To determine whether molecular testing has improved, 2015 data will be analyzed in the near future as well.
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P1.02-007 - Alk Translocated NSCLC in the West of Scotland: Patient Demographics and Outcomes (ID 4199)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N. Steele, P. Westwood, S. Parker, N. Williams, C.P.C. Dick, L. Mukherjee
- Abstract
Background:
A translocation in the anaplastic lymphoma kinase gene is found in 3-5% of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Patients with this mutation (ALK+) have shown marked responses to the tyrosine kinase inhibitor crizotinib. Second line Crizotinib has been available in Scotland since October 2013 for patients with ALK+ NSCLC. Since January 2014, reflex testing at diagnosis of all non-squamous NSCLC has been carried out in the West of Scotland (WoS) regardless of stage. Here we present the demographics of an Alk +ve cohort from an unselected Scottish NSCLC population and their clinical outcomes.
Methods:
Details of patients with Alk+ NSCLC were obtained from the regional molecular genetics laboratory. 60 patients with NSCLC from WoS tested ALK+ between 1st January 2014 and 30[th] June 2016. Patient records were reviewed retrospectively.
Results:
Median laboratory turnaround for alk testing was 21 days in 2014, 14 days in 2015 and 13 days in 2016. 3 (5%) patients were under 50 years, 8 (13%) 50-60 years, 23 (38%) 60-70 years, 17 (28%) 70-80 years and 9 (15%) patients were > 80 years old at time of testing. Median age was 69. 55% were male and 45% female. 67% were current or ex smokers. Only 22% were never-smokers. The majority (82%) had stage 3 or 4 disease at diagnosis. Only 39% (17/38) of patients with stage 4 ALK+ NSCLC were well enough to receive chemotherapy and 4 of these (24%) did not complete all planned cycles. 10 patients have received crizotinib so far. Median number of cycles is 3 overall (range 1-9). Where documented, reasons for discontinuation were disease progression or death from NSCLC (4), sudden death not related to NSCLC (2), intercurrent illness (2) and pneumonitis (1) . 3 patients continue on crizotinib as of June 2016. Of the 13 patients who have received crizotinib, 3 have had a PR, 4 SD 2 PD and 4 NE. Updated outcomes will be presented.
Conclusion:
A high quality reflex ALK testing service is being delivered in WoS with clinically acceptable turnaround times. Our ALK+ patients do not entirely reflect the literature and are frequently elderly, current or ex-smokers with advanced and aggressive disease. This may reflect the unselected nature of this population. Many Alk+ patients were too unwell to receive chemotherapy or tolerated it poorly and did not have the opportunity to access an alk inhibitor. First line Alk inhibitors may improve outcomes for this group of patients.
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- Abstract
Background:
Lung adenocarcinoma patients in advanced stage of disease that harbor EGFR sensitizing mutations are eligible for treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) due to a high likelihood of response. Most patients will ultimately develop resistance at disease progression. The T790M mutation is a dominant resistance mechanism to TKI. EGFR plasma testing enables non-invasive monitoring and detection of T790M. We followed patients with EGFR sensitizing mutations by measuring EGFR mutations in plasma during TKI treatment.
Methods:
We analyzed patients who were diagnosed lung adenocarcinoma stage IV, detected EGFR sensitizing mutations in tumor tissue samples and treated with TKI at University Clinic Golnik. We collected baseline plasma samples prior to TKI treatment and consecutive plasma samples at different time intervals after initiation of therapy. At the beginning, two separate tests, cobas® EGFR Mutation Test for tissue (CE-IVD) and plasma (under development) were used, and since October 2015 one test for tissue and plasma, cobas® EGFR Mutation Test v2 (Roche, Pleasanton, CA, USA) is used. Detected EGFR mutations in plasma samples were expressed as semi-quantitative index (SQI) which reflects a proportion of mutated versus wild-type copies of the EGFR gene.
Results:
During 2-year period we collected 414 peripheral blood samples from 63 patients and performed 619 EGFR plasma tests. There are 25 patients with baseline and serial follow-up EGFR plasma tests, 16 patients with only serial follow-up EGFR tests since they started with TKI treatment before EGFR plasma testing was available, 5 patients are included in adjuvant setting, and 17 patients had no monitoring due to various reasons. Maximum number of EGFR plasma tests done per patient was 27 at 20 time-points. When introducing EGFR plasma testing, we prepared two aliquots of plasma out of 10 ml blood sample in EDTA-tubes and run test for both aliquots. Results of reproducibility study showed 95% concordance rate between both aliquots and thus we modified protocol to run the second aliquot only if the first one was negative. At disease progression, reappearance of EGFR sensitizing mutations with increasing SQI levels was detected. In 14 patients who progressed we detected T790M mutation, in 10 of them during monitoring TKI treatment. We also observed daily variation in EGFR mutation levels in the plasma.
Conclusion:
These data support the value of EGFR plasma testing to monitor the patient`s response to TKI and detect T790M resistance mutation prior to clinical progression in a routine clinical setting.
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P1.02-009 - High Concordance of ALK Rearrangement Testing between ALK RNA-In Situ Hybridization and IHC/FISH in Patients with Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 4402)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Yoshizawa
- Abstract
Background:
Patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene rearrangements manifest good responses to ALK inhibitors and thus, accurate and rapid identification of ALK gene rearrangements is essential for the clinical application of ALK-targeted therapies. The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of the recently developed ALK RNA-in situ hybridization (RNA-ISH) assay, using formalin fixed paraffin embedded samples of lung adenocarcinoma tissue.
Methods:
We first tested whether ALK RNA-ISH could be performed in 11 resected lung adenocarcinomas in which ALK gene rearrangements were confirmed by immunohistochemistry (IHC, D5F3), and/or fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and also clarified the intra-tumor heterogeneity of ALK RNA-ISH by counting 100 tumor cells in 10 different loci (total, 1000 tumor cells) in each tumor. Secondly, we analyzed the diagnostic accuracy of ALK RNA-ISH in tissue microarrays (TMAs) containing 294 lung adenocarcinoma cores (by counting 100 tumor cells in each core) with no information about ALK gene rearrangements and compared these results with those of conventional IHC and FISH tests.
Results:
ALK mRNA expression was observed in all 11 resected lung adenocarcinomas by the ALK RNA-ISH assay and the median of positive tumor cells was 67.7%, whereas ALK mRNA expression was not observed in normal lung cells in the background. Next, 5 ALK positive cases were found by IHC and/or FISH in the 294 cases of lung adenocarcinoma. The median of positive cells by ALK RNA-ISH in these 5 cases was 75.6% (range: 40-94%), whereas the median of positive cells by ALK RNA-ISH in the remaining 289 cases was 0.3% (range: 0-15%). When the cutoff value was set as 15% based on the first test, the ALK RNA-ISH–positive and ALK RNA-ISH–negative cases were readily distinguishable with 100% sensitivity and specificity compared with the results of IHC and/or FISH.
Conclusion:
Our findings suggest that the ALK RNA-ISH assay is useful for detecting ALK positive lung adenocarcinomas with high sensitivity and specificity compared with the conventional IHC and FISH test. Thus, this study provides important and timely insight into the clinical testing of ALK in lung cancer because the RNA-ISH assay detects the target mRNA easily and rapidly.
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P1.02-010 - Frequency of Uncommon EGFR Mutations in NSCLC in an Argentinean University Institution (ID 4405)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C. Gabay, M. Krasnapolski, M.N. Rusjan, L. Gimenez, E. Rojas Bilbao, L.A. Thompson, M.A. Castro
- Abstract
Background:
EGFR mutations are present in approximately 15% of NSCLC Caucasian patients, with a similar frequency described in Argentina.Exon 19 deletions and exon 21 L858R are consider common mutations (>90 %) that predict better progression free survival with EGFR-TKIs than with chemotherapy treatment. Most relevant uncommon mutations had a frequency ranged from 1.9% to 7.9% between different populations and their outcome, in general, is less favorable.
Methods:
We analyzed, retrospectively, our dataset of EGFR mutational status in the last two years with the objective to describe the frequency and characteristics of the patients with uncommon EGFR mutations in our population of NSCLC patients. The mutational analysis was performed on formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissue blocks. EGFR exons 18 through 21 were amplified by PCR- based technology.
Results:
A total of 113 patients underwent EGFR testing since January 2014 until June 2016. Among them, 29 cases (25.7 %) harbored EGFR mutations. The exon 19 deletions (n=9; 8%) and L858R point mutation (n=6; 5.3%) accounted for the 51.7 % of EGFR mutated cases (13.3% of the population explored) while 48.3 % were uncommon mutations (12,4%). In the last group, mutations sites were: G719X in exon 18 (n=9; 8%), L861Q in exon 21 (n=2; 1.8%), INS20 in exon 20 (n=2; 1.8%) and S768I in exon 20 (n=1; 0.9%). All the 14 patients carrying EGFR uncommon mutations had adenocarcinoma histology. In addition, they were more frequently observed in men than in women (79% versus 21%) and in smokers than in nonsmokers (65% versus 45%). The mean age was 62.5 years. Most of the patients (n=11; 75.6%) had advanced disease (stage IIIB-IV) at diagnosis. No one had Asian ethnicity. Seven patients (50%) received EGFR-TKIs for first or second line treatment (4 erlotinib, 2 afatinib and 1 gefitinib). None of them showed sustained clinical benefit. At present, 7 out of 12 patients had died.
Conclusion:
Although the clinical characteristics of our cohort are similar to the data published, we noted a higher and unusual frequency of EGFR uncommon mutations especially exon 18 G719X.All cases treated with EGFR-TKIs showed poor sensitivity to therapy. Time to treatment and accessibility to appropriate therapy in this subgroup are important issues to explore in future reports from public institutions of our region.
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P1.02-011 - Comparison of EGFR and KRAS Mutations in Archival Tissue and Circulating Tumor DNA: The Impact of Tumor Heterogeneity (ID 4504)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Y. Wang, C. Ho, K. Bushell, S. Vandt, I. Bosdet, L. Swanson, J. Laskin, S. Sun, B. Melosky, N. Murray, R. Morin, A. Karsan, H. Kennecke
- Abstract
Background:
In non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) has gained acceptance as a potential alternative to tissue biopsies to identify targetable mutations. Individual ctDNA platforms have varying abilities to detect specific mutations. A prospective, multicenter study was conducted to determine concordance, sensitivity, and specificity of ctDNA genotyping, with archival tissue DNA (atDNA) as the reference standard.
Methods:
Patients with incurable advanced NSCLC at the BC Cancer Agency were enrolled over 14 months. Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) and high-throughput multiplex amplification of a 27-gene panel (Raindance) was used for atDNA analysis. Four mL of plasma was collected in Streck (Cell Free DNA BCT) tubes for ctDNA genotyping using the Boreal Genomic OnTarget. Analysis of concordance, sensitivity, and specificity was conducted with atDNA used as the standard.
Results:
Seventy-six patients were enrolled, median age 66, 33 (44%) male, 69 (91%) metastatic disease, 47 (62%) with primary disease in-situ. Twenty-six EGFR mutations in 22 atDNA samples, and 12 mutations in 11 ctDNA samples were detected, with a concordance of 78%, sensitivity of 39%, and specificity 98%. One EGFR T790M mutation was positive by ctDNA alone. Twenty-one KRAS mutations in 21 atDNA samples were detected. Within this subgroup, 10 ctDNA samples had KRAS mutations with a concordance of 76%, sensitivity of 50%, and specificity of 80%. Fourteen KRAS mutations were detected by ctDNA only. The interval between archival tissue and ctDNA collection, and time between treatment and ctDNA collection, did not significantly impact the rate of concordance (p> 0.05).
Conclusion:
Although the sensitivity is limited, the Boreal Genomic OnTarget ctDNA analysis is specific in identifying clinically relevant EGFR mutations and has acceptable concordance rates between ctDNA and atDNA testing. Targetable EGFR and KRAS mutations were detected in ctDNA but not atDNA, which may reflect site of biopsy, tumor heterogeneity, or technical limitations of assays used. Given the high specificity and non-invasive nature of this test, positive results in EGFR mutations can be used to direct therapeutic decisions, especially accounting for clonal evolution overtime in detection of resistance mutations.
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- Abstract
Background:
2015 new WHO classification lists four rare variants of invasive adenocarcinoma of the lung (VIA): invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma, colloid adenocarcinoma, fetal adenocarcinoma and enteric adenocarcinoma. Very little information is known regarding the molecular alterations and prognostic values for rarity of VIA. The aim of present study was to investigate the common actionable mutations and survival in VIA.
Methods:
Patients who with pathologic confirmed as VIA with completely resected stage I-ⅢA were enrolled from 2010 to 2013. For comparison, we evaluated the gene status and survival from 380 non-VIA lung adenocarcinoma patients in 2012. RT-PCR was utilized for detecting the mutations of EGFR, KRAS, NRAS, PIK3CA, BRAF, HER2 and the fusion of ALK, ROS1 and RET. Survival curves were plotted with Kaplan-Meier method.
Results:
Thirty one patients were recruited from 1120 lung adenocarcinoma,including invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma (n=15), enteric adenocarcinoma(n=9), colloid adenocarcinoma (n=4) and fetal adenocarcinoma(n=3) . The overall frequency of gene abnormality in VIA was 48.4% (15/31). The genes abnormality was as follows: KRAS mutation (n=5), ALK rearrangement (n=4),PIK3CA (n=2), EGFR mutation (n=2), HER2 mutation (n=1) and ROS1 rearrangement (n=1). No mutations of NRAS, BRAF or RET were observed . The frequency of gene abnormality was lower in VIA than non-VIA patients (48.4% vs.74.7%,P=0.0015). No recurrence free survival difference existed in the VIA and non-VIA patients (38.0 vs.47.0 months,P=0.524) . A trend of worse overall survival in VIA than those with non-VIA patients was found(48.0vs.57.0 months, P=0.052).
Conclusion:
VIA is rare in lung adenocarcinoma with lower frequency of common gene abnormality. Invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma was the most frequent subtype and KRAS was a predominant actionable mutation in VIA patients. A trend of worse survival existed in VIA than non-VIA patients.
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- Abstract
Background:
ALK, ROS1 and RET rearrangements represent three most frequency of fusion genes in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Rearrangements of the three genes are predominantly found in lung adenocarcinoma,while,rare in non-adenocarcinoma. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency, clinicopathological characteristics and survival of ALK, ROS1 and RET arrangements in non-adenocarcinoma NSCLC patients.
Methods:
We screened ALK,ROS1 and RET arrangements in patients with completely resected non-adenocarcinoma NSCLC using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (PCR). All positive samples were confirmed with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Survival analysis was performed with Kaplan-Meier method and log-rank for comparison.
Results:
Totally, 385 patients, who underwent complete resection, including 245 with squamous cell carcinoma, 85 with adenosquamous carcinoma and 55 with large cell carcinoma were enrolled. Twelve patients were identified as harboring fusion genes,including seven with ALK, three with ROS1 and two with RET rearrangements. The frequencies of fusions in adenosquamous carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and large cell carcinoma were 8.2%,1.6% and 1.8%, respectively. The median age of 12 patients was 49.5 years and three patients had smoking history. No survival difference existed between fusion genes positive and negative patients (36.7 vs.50.2 months,P=0.21).
Conclusion:
The frequencies of ALK, ROS1 and RET rearrangements are low in non-adenocarcinoma NSCLC patients, and the clinical characteristics are similar with those in lung adenocarcinoma. Fusions of the three genes are not prognostic marker for non-adnocarcinoma NSCLC patients.
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- Abstract
Background:
ERBB2 (HER2) is a driver gene identified in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The prevalence, clinicopathology, genetic variability and treatment of HER2-positive NSCLC in Chinese population are unclear.
Methods:
Eight hundred and fifty-nine patients with pathologically confirmed NSCLC were screened for HER2 mutations using Sanger sequencing. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) was performed in positive cases. HER2 amplification was detected with FISH. Overall survival (OS) was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier methods and compared with log-rank tests.
Results:
Twenty-one cases carrying HER2 mutations were identified with a prevalence of 2.4%. HER2 mutations were more frequently encountered in females, non-smokers and adenocarcinoma. NGS was performed in 19 out of 21 patients, The results showed 16 cases with additional genetic aberrations, most commonly associated with TP53 (n = 6), followed by EGFR (n = 3), NF1 (n = 3), KRAS (n = 2) and other mutations. One patient harbored HER2 amplification(figure 1). Four patients with stage IV received afatinib treatment, and three showed stable disease with a median progression-free survival of 4 months and one patient was diagnosed with progressive disease. No survival difference existed between HER2 positive and negative patients( (49.3 months vs.45.0 months, P = 0.150).
Conclusion:
HER2 mutations represent a distinct subset of NSCLC. NGS showed that HER2 mutations commonly co-existed with other driver genes. Afatinib treatment displayed moderate efficacy in patients with HER2 mutations.
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- Abstract
Background:
Currently, multicenter studies involving a large number of patients have not been not undertaken to detect the frequencies of EGFR mutations and ALK rearrangement in malignant pleural effusion (MPE) samples of patients with non-squamous, non‒small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), we undertook a multicenter, observational study of Asian patients with untreated stage IV NSCLC.
Methods:
Eligible patients had untreated of EGFR and ALK inhibitor stage IV non-squamous NSCLC patients with MPE. The EGFR and ALK status of MPE and partially paired tumor tissue was determined with reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR).
Results:
Among 210 patients with pleural effusion samples confirmed as malignant, 16 had EML4-ALK fusion gene rearrangements and 89 had EGFR mutations. No ALK/EGFR coaltered gene was found. Tumor tissue of 56 patients were collected. EGFR and ALK concordance rates between MPE samples and matched tumor tissue samples from 56 patients were 87.5% (49/56) and 96.1% (49/51), respectively. There was a tendency for a longer progression free survival in patients with EGFR accordance in comparison with those with EGFR discordance between tumor tissue and MPE samples (9.8 vs 6.2 months, respectively; p = 0.078). A same trend was found in patients with ALK accordance and discordance (10.0 vs 3.2 months, respectively; p = 0.004) .
Conclusion:
These results demonstrate that MPE can be substituted for tumor tissues for EGFR and ALK gene detection. Patients with gene mutations or arrangement discordance between tumor tissue and MPE samples showed a inferior efficacy of targeted therapy than those with accordance.
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P1.02-016 - HER4 Expression Was Related to the Sensitivity of EGFR-TKI in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 4521)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Inoue, J. Yoshida, T. Iwanami, Y. Nabe, M. Kanayama, D. Yasuda
- Abstract
Background:
EGFR-TKIs show significant therapeutic effects against non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with EGFR-activating mutations, however 20-30% of them have no response to EGFR-TKIs. HER-family receptors play a critical role in tumor progression, differentiation and survival in lung cancer. Recent studies suggest that the overexpression of HER-family receptors have a potential risk of EGFR-TKIs resistance. The aims of this study were to investigate the association between EGFR-mutation and the expression of HER-family receptor in regard to clinical outcomes.
Methods:
We invested EGFR mutation by direct PCR analysis and HER2-4 expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC) of 231 consecutive non-small cell lung cancers, who had undertaken an operation from January 2007 to July 2012. The intensity of HER2-4 was graded (score: 0-3) from negative (score: 0-1) to positive (score: 2-3). The observed protein expression levels were analyzed for correlation to EGFR mutation status, clinicopathological parameters and the responses of EGFR-TKI treatment.
Results:
EGFR mutation was observed in 40% of lung cancer, 61% of p. [Leu858Arg]and 31% of exon 19 deletion. Positive expression rates of HER2, HER3 and HER4 were 22.9%, 1.2%, 38.5%, respectively. HER4 positive rare of EGFR positive group was significantly higher than that of EGFR negative group (52% vs 30%, P<0.01), however there was no difference in HER2 expression. In histological type, positive rates of HER2 and HER4 in adenocarcinoma were higher than that in squamous cell carcinoma (HER2: 26% vs 13%, P=0.07, HER4: 49% vs 13%, P<0.01). HER4 positive rate of HER2 positive group was significantly lower that of HER2 negative group (43% vs 26%, P=0.03). The response rate of EGFR-TKIs in HER2 positive group was low, but high in HER4 positive group.
Conclusion:
Our data showed that HER4 expression was independent form EGFR mutation and HER2 expression, but related to the sensitivity against EGFR-TKIs. HER4 positive patients may be candidate for pan-HER inhibitor augments.
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- Abstract
Background:
The most lethality in NSCLC is due to uncontrolled tumor metastasis. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) has been confirmed to be an effective biomarker in EGFR-TKIs treatment for advanced NSCLC. Previous studies have demonstrated EGFR mutation abundance could predict benefit from EGFR-TKIs treatment. However, there is no investigation on the correlation between EGFR mutation abundance and tumor metastasis. Here we aimed to explore potential effect of EGFR mutation abundance on tumor metastasis and EGFR-TKIs prognosis.
Methods:
3913 patients from Henan Cancer Hospital diagnosed with NSCLC were enrolled. The EGFR mutation abundance in tumor specimens was quantified by amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS). Above 10% was defined as high abundance, and below 10% was defined as low abundance.
Results:
The ratio of high mutation abundance in age < 60 years group was significantly higher than that in age ≥ 60 years group (55.4% vs. 42.5%, P=0.000), similar distribution was also detected in 19 exon deletion and L858R subgroup (P=0.003 and 0.030, respectively). Whereas the distribution of EGFR mutation abundance was no difference between surgery and biopsy specimens (P=1.000). Additionally, the ratio of high abundance in 19 exon deletion was obviously higher than that in L858R and rare mutations (66.5% vs. 31.6% vs. 51.1%, P=0.000). Meanwhile, the ratio of high abundance in patients with hepar metastasis was significantly higher than that in patients without hepar metastasis (57.2% vs. 47.8%, P=0.036), but that in brain or bone metastasis was demonstrated no significant difference (P=0.897 and P=0.293, respectively). The subgroup analysis among above metastasis patients indicated the ratio of high abundance in 19 exon deletion was significantly higher that in L858R. Furthmore, the difference in median PFS between 19 exon deletion and L858R group was significant (17.5 months vs. 9.2 months, P=0.003).
Conclusion:
EGFR mutation abundance was not associated with the methods of collecting specimens. The younger patients more likely harbor high EGFR mutation abundance. Hepar metastasis status was associated with EGFR mutation abundance. Median PFS in 19 exon deletion patients was notablely longer than that in L858R group for EGFR-TKIs treatment, which may refer to high abundance in 19 exon deletion.
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- Abstract
Background:
Histological transformation including small cell carcinoma and epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) is one of the discovered mechanisms of the acquired resistance to EGFR-TKI. We report two cases of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor-Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor(EGFR-TKI) resistant pulmonary adenocarcinoma associated with EMT features that showed osteosarcomatous differentiation in rebiopsy specimens.
Methods:
We identified two patients with primary lung adenocarcinoma that showed osteosarcomatous transformation on second biopsy (n = 60) between 2010 and 2016. Histomorphologic features and EGFR mutation results were compared between initial and second biopsy samples.
Results:
Case 1 A 55-year-old female, non-smoker presenting chronic cough was found to have pulmonary adenocarcinoma harboring EGFR exon 19 deletion mutation with disseminated intrapulmonary metastasis. After 1 year of gefinitib treatment, radiologic evaluation showed left iliac metastases with extraosseous ossification. Case 2 A 58-year-old man who had undergone right upper lobectomy of the lung was diagnosed as adenocarcinoma with pT1N0M0 harboring an EGFR exon 19 deletion mutation. Three years after surgery, metastatic lesions developed in the right lower lobe and pleura. After 15 months of conventional chemotherapy, 2nd biopsy for the pulmonary lesion confirmed T790M mutation and additional metastatic lesions found in T2 and T5 vertebral bodies were removed by surgical curettage. Rebiopsy of the metastatic bone lesions of these two patients showed metastatic adenocarcinoma merging with poorly differentiated sarcomatous components. Remarkably, the spindle shaped sarcomatous tumor cells produced ill-defined eosinophilic lace-like osteoid. These osteoid components were closely associated with the tumor cells and deposited as disorganized features. The sarcomatous neoplastic cells intermingled with osteoid demonstrate unequivocal features of malignancy, which is different from reactive osteoid or callus formation. EGFR mutation status were same from that of primary lung specimen and IHC showed vimentin expression and decreased E-cadherin (EMT feature).
Conclusion:
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to describe pulmonary adenocarcinoma with osteosarcomatous differentiation in rebiopsy specimens of EGFR-TKI resistant patients. As the evaluation of metastatic sites for rebiopsy were bone lesions in both patients, the role of the tumor microenvironment may support the transformation from adenocarcinoma to osteosarcomatous phenotype. A few previous studies suggested that a bone environment is essential for osteosarcoma development from transformed mesenchymal stem cells. Our findings suggest that the differences of the intrinsic nature between epithelial and osteosarcomatous mesenchymal cancers may be the cause of the acquired resistance of EGFR-TKI.
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- Abstract
Background:
Analysis of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene is currently one of the most important tests in establishment of a treatment strategy for primary lung cancer. Major mutations of exon 19 deletion and exon 20 point mutation (L858R) are particularly well known in adenocarcinomas, and tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have provided significant benefits to patients with such mutations. Complex mutation patterns of EGFR have also been reported, but their significance is unknown.
Methods:
Clinicopathological features and response to treatment of non-small lung cancer (NSCLC) with complex mutation of the EGFR gene were investigated in cases treated at Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center from June 2014 to March 2016.
Results:
EGFR gene analysis was performed in 334 cases, of which 108 had EGFR mutations. These cases included 7 (6.5%) with complex mutations: two males (28.6%) and five females (71.4%) with an age of 71.0±6.0 (mean±SD) years. Five of the 7 cases underwent surgery and two were inoperable. The histological diagnoses were adenocarcinomas (n=6) and squamous cell carcinoma (n=1). The pathological stage in the surgical cases (all adenocarcinomas) were IB, IIA, and IIIA in 2, 1 and 2 cases, respectively. Both inoperable cases were clinical stage IV. The EGFR complex mutation patterns were 19 deletion and 20 T790M (n=2, with one case with acquired TKI resistance), 18 G719X and 21 L861Q (n=3), 19 deletion and 21 L858R (n=1), and 20 T790 and 21 L858R (n=1). In the five surgical cases, two (pStage IIA, 19 deletion and 20 T790M; pStage IIIA, 18 G719X and 21 L861Q) received postoperative TKI therapy because of recurrence. Both patients had a poor response to TKIs and both died. The patients in another three surgical cases are alive without receiving TKI therapy. Two inoperable cases (19 deletion and 20 T790M; 18 G719X and 21 L861Q) were treated with standard chemotherapy and TKIs, and also died. The disease-free survival period in the surgical cases was 532±319 days and the overall survival period in the case with postoperative recurrence and the inoperable cases was 810±563 days. The progression-free survival period in patients treated with TKIs was 101.5±90.6 days.
Conclusion:
In patients with EGFR mutation, 6.5% have complex mutations, of which 85.7% are minor-on-minor or minor-on-major mutations. Lung cancer with complex mutation of EGFR tends to have a poorer response to TKIs compared to cases with a major single mutation.
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P1.02-020 - The Effect of EGF-Pathway Targeted Immunization (EGF PTI) on STAT3 and Cancer Stem Cells in EGFR Mutant NSCLC Cells (ID 4698)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Codony Servat, M.A. Molina Vila, J. Bertrán-Alamillo, S. García, N. Karachaliou, E. D'Hondt, R. Rosell
- Abstract
Background:
The vast majority of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with EGFR mutant tumors will develop disease progression following successful treatment with an EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). Resistance to EGFR-TKIs is due to various mechanisms, such as the secondary mutation (T790M) or the activation of alternative pathways (MET, AXL). What has not been fully appreciated is that EGFR blockade induces an imbalance in favor of survival, increases activity of STAT3 and enriches lung CSCs through Notch3-dependent signaling. EGF-PTI was designed to elicit an antibody response against EGF, in order to reduce EGF receptor signaling and limit tumor growth. We have explored whether EGF-PTI alone or in combination with EGFR TKIs may efficiently inhibit STAT3 and target CSCs.
Methods:
EGF PTI was provided by Bioven (Europe) Ltd. Gefitinib, erlotinib and the recently FDA-approved third-generation EGFR TKI, AZD9291 (osimertinib) were purchased from Selleck chemicals. Western blotting was used to assess the effect of the drugs on ERK, AKT and STAT3 phosphorylation and on Notch and PARP cleavage in EGFR (del19) mutant NSCLC PC9 cells and gefitinib-resistant PC9-GR4 cells. PC9-GR4 cells have been established in our lab and harbor the resistant T790M mutation (T790M+). The protein expression of AXL and CSCs markers such as HES1 (downstream effector of Notch) and Bmi1 was also examined.
Results:
Gefitinib, erlotinib or AZD9291 suppressed EGFR, ERK1/2 and AKT phosphorylation in PC9 cells but increased STAT3 phosphorylation on the tyrosine residue 705 in both PC9 and PC9-GR4 cells. EGF-PTI suppressed STAT3, EGFR and ERK1/2 and the combination of each of the three EGFR TKIs with EGF-PTI lead to more potent inhibition of STAT3, EGFR and ERK1/2. The EGF-PTI induced AKT phosphorylation was reversed when EGF PTI was combined with EGFR TKIs. Interestingly, EGF-PTI blocked Notch cleavage and decreased the expression of HES1. The expression of Bmi1 and AXL were also attenuated with EGF PTI and apoptosis was enhanced through the induction of PARP cleavage.
Conclusion:
EGF PTI may reverse mechanisms of resistance to single EGFR inhibition and the combination of EGF PTI with EGFR TKIs efficiently inhibits downstream signaling pathways in T790M+ cells. Based on these results, the design of a proof-of-concept trial with the combination of EGF PTI with gefitinib for the first line treatment of EGFR mutant NSCLC patients is in progress.
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P1.02-021 - Review of Clinical Outcomes Attributable to Next Generation Sequencing Based Broad Mutation Panel Testing in Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 4701)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.P. O'Brien, K. Brosnan, S. Cuffe, S.P. Finn
- Abstract
Background:
Molecular testing of lung cancer is currently performed on a relatively restricted set of standard-of-care markers (normally EGFR and ALK). The introduction of next generation sequencing (NGS) in clinical laboratories has permitted the adoption of broader testing using mutation panels. This study compared the number of mutations detected and outcomes generated as a result of replacing standalone EGFR and ALK assays with a combined mutation and gene fusion assay based on NGS in routine clinical practice.
Methods:
Panel testing was implemented using a bioinformatically selected subset of targets from the Thermo-Fisher Oncomine[TM] Focus assay. The results of testing were compared against the incumbent assay platforms (Roche Cobas® EGFR, Abbott Vysis[TM] ALK) to determine differences in mutation detection and resultant alterations to patient treatment.
Results:
Over a 5 month period of testing, 231 lung adenocarcinomas were analysed using the extended mutation and fusion panel. In total 126 of 231 cases had a mutation or fusion identified; EGFR (n=33), KRAS (n=76), BRAF (n=8), ERBB2 (n=2), ALK-fusion (n=5), RET fusion (n=1). Additionally, one off-target fusion was detected during assay QC. Of the above results 31 EGFR and 5 ALK would have been detected using the benchmark Roche Cobas EGFR and Abbott Vysis ALK FISH methodologies. The additional detections can be classified as nonactionable (KRAS, BRAF) or actionable (RET fusion, 2 EGFR mutations not identified by Cobas, 2 ERBB2 mutations and one off-target fusion). Of the 6 actionable genetic lesions, 4 selected for targeted therapies in lung cancer (EGFR, ERBB2). Two fusions detected by this assay (CCDC6-RET and TMPRSS2-ERG) suggested an alternative diagnosis to that of lung cancer when reviewed with morphology, immunohistochemistry and clinicopathological correlation.
Conclusion:
When compared with standalone assay testing, panel testing of lung cancer identified mutations in an additional 39% of patients and identified genetic lesions that altered targeted therapy selection (2%) or diagnosis (1%). Broad mutation panel testing using NGS has shown itself to be superior at the level of clinical decision making by ascribing a molecular subtype to 39% more cancers and identifying an additional 2% of cases where targeted therapies may be of benefit. Crucially, the addition of 'off-target' mutations and fusions prompts re-examination and, where necessary, correction of primary diagnosis at a rate of 1% in our hands. This feature of panel testing has been overlooked and it is critical for the oncology and pathology communities to be aware of its significance.
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P1.02-022 - Establishing Reflex NGS Testing in NSCLC in a Regional Network of County Hospitals in Central Sweden (ID 4759)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Isaksson, L. Willén, L. La Fleur, S. Mindus, M. Sundstrom, E. Brandén, H. Koyi, M. Sandelin, K. Lamberg, P. Micke, L. Moens, G. Lundberg, J. Botling
- Abstract
Background:
Extended genetic testing of NSCLC tumor samples provides a foundation for personalized cancer treatment and use of new targeted medication. Testing with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), mostly performed at university hospitals, has not been available for all patients due to geographic and economic reasons. Many lung cancer patients carry a heavy burden of disease and extensive travelling can negatively impact quality of life. The ability to perform a modern state-of the art work-up at local hospitals, without compromising on diagnostic quality, will enable equal access to personalized treatment for lung cancer patients.
Methods:
In Gävle County hospital routine diagnostic immunohistochemistry (IHC) on biopsies is performed at the local pathology lab. In the case of NSCLC the formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue samples are sent to Uppsala University hospital for further molecular pathology and NGS testing. A targeted NGS test (18 gene panel) was established for mutation screening of small biopsies and cytology specimens (Moens et al., J Mol Diagn, 2015). Fusion genes - ALK, ROS1 and RET - are analysed by IHC, FISH and nanoString. Structured biobanking of surplus biopsies and blood samples during treatment, for explorative biomarker testing and research, was set up as a regional extension of the UCAN infrastructure, including detailed registration of clinical baseline and real-time follow-up data in a dedicated database.
Results:
Inclusion of patients in the biobanking cohort started gradually during 2015 in Uppsala, and in February 2016 in Gävle. The cumulative inclusion in the UCAN biobank is updated at www.u-can.uu.se (see Statistics). To date (July 2016) 70 patients have been included at Gävle County hospital covering 95% of the newly diagnosed NSCLC patients. So, far 242 patients from the region were tested by NGS yielding 23 EGFR+ (9.5%), 75 KRAS+ (31%), 5 BRAF+ (2.1%, codon 600), 2 MET (0.8%, exon 14 skipping), 1 ERBB2 (0.4%, exon 20 insertion), and 6 PIK3CA (2.5%, exon 9/20) cases. Fusion gene analysis resulted in 5 ALK+ (2.1%), 1 ROS1 and 1 RET patients.
Conclusion:
Decentralised local patient care, tissue/blood sampling and biobanking in combination with centralised molecular testing allows advanced lung cancer diagnostics and clinical research in networks of county hospitals. Survival benefits from modern targeted drugs, for national lung cancer cohorts, can only be achieved and evaluated in population-based settings without bias related to selective referral to major cancer centers.
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- Abstract
Background:
Next generation sequencing (NGS) enables us to detect comprehensive genetic aberrations within a tumor sample, which provides potential alternative to well adopted clinical diagnostic approaches such as amplification refractory mutation system PCR (ARMS-PCR) and FISH. However, there is no enough data to illustrate the overall concordance between NGS with traditional clinical diagnostic approaches. This study is aimed to fill in this blank.
Methods:
We have used 20 cell lines from ATCC and 19 FFPE samples to construct molecular standards and there are 50, 34 and 48 samples for SNV and Indel, CNV and fusion, respectively. All the mutations were verified by Sanger sequencing or QuantStudio 3D digital PCR. To assess the performance of NGS, an amplicon-based NGS strategy was used to detect gene mutations in molecular standards. In order to illustrate the overall concordance between NGS with ARMS-PCR and FISH, we further verified NGS in 2500 retrospective FFPE samples from non-small lung cancer (NSCLC) and breast cancer patients.
Results:
So far, we have detected genetic aberrations in 108 FFPE samples. For SNV and Indel, we focused on the mutation profile of EGFR, KRAS, BARF and PIK3CA, which were the most common mutations in NSCLC. In molecular standards, 34 of 50 (68%) were positive for Sanger and 33 of 50 were positive for NGS, thus the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy was 97%, 100% and 98%, respectively. In FFPE samples from 31 lung cancer patients, NGS results were consistent with ARMS-PCR. For CNV, in molecular standards, the copy number of HER2, MET, EGFR and FGFR1 detected by NGS was high consistent with digital PCR and R[2 ]was 0.9673. In FFPE samples from 45 breast cancer patients, 80% of cases (36/45) were HER2 amplification positive and 20% (9/45) were negative for FISH, 34 HER2 positive and 9 HER2 negative for FISH were also classified by NGS. Thus, the overall concordance between NGS and FISH were 95.56%. For ALK and ROS1 gene fusion, the overall concordance were both 100% in 48 molecular standards (NGS versus Sanger sequencing) and 32 FFPE samples (NGS versus FISH).
Conclusion:
Our result reveal that the amplicon-based NGS strategy for detecting genetic aberrations is of high accuracy and comparable with standard clinical diagnostic approaches, and therefore provides a promising diagnosis approach for clinical in the future.
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- Abstract
Background:
Chromosomal rearrangements of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) compose approximately 4-6% of non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and the patients can be prescribed with targeted therapy. Nevertheless, acquired resistance towards existing ALK-specific inhibitors is inevitable in most cases. This suggests that a detailed molecular characterization of NSCLC with ALK rearrangement and dissection of ALK-specific signaling pathway are strongly needed.
Methods:
Approximately 3000 NSCLC cases with EGFR and KRAS wild types were screened for ALK alterations by immunohistochemistry (IHC). From the 158 ALK IHC-positive samples, we further validated ALK rearrangement through fluorescence in situ hybridization and RNA color-coded probes. We then performed targeted deep sequencing using a customized panel embedded with 81 select set of cancer associated genes in 129 ALK-positive cases for their molecular characterization. Additional clinical analysis and drug viability assays between EML4-ALK long and short forms were assessed as well. We also conducted multiplexed direct mRNA expression profiling using a panel of 770 essential key driver genes that take part in most cancer pathways. Target gene silencing, overexpression, migration assay, and immunoprecipitation were conducted for functional analysis of identified molecules.
Results:
We found that most ALK genomic breaks occurred at intron 19 (92.7%), which conjoined with partner genes through non-homologous end joining repair system. ALK fusion profiling exhibited that 82% of fusions were EML4-ALK (129/158), 2.4% were HIP1-ALK (4/158), 1.8% KIF5B-ALK (3/158), 1 case was KLC1-ALK, and the rest were unrecognized ALK fusions (21/158). From the unknown partners, we identified 3 novel ALK fusion partners: GCC2, LMO7, and PHACTR1. We also identified 4 novel somatic mutations of ALK: T1151R, R1192P, A1280V, and L1535Q. RNA expression profiling further revealed that NSCLC with ALK rearrangement showed higher expression of ITGB3 with statistical significance. Combinatorial treatment of ALK (crizotinib) and ITGB3 (LM609 antibody) decreased cell migration and invasive properties of ALK-positive cell lines. Furthermore, from our new classification system of EML4-ALK variants, the cases with short EML4-ALK form showed more advanced stages and more frequent metastases than the cases with long form in NSCLCs.
Conclusion:
This is the primary mass-scale study of ALK-rearranged NSCLC to our knowledge. Through this integrated analysis, we provide genomic details and clinical insight of NSCLC with ALK rearrangement. Also, we suggest a novel therapeutic approach of treating ALK-rearranged NSCLC patients with ALK and ITGB3 inhibitors.
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P1.02-025 - Evaluation of NGS and RT-PCR Methods for ALK Assessment in European NSCLC Patients: Results from the ETOP Lungscape Project (ID 5001)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.P. Finn, I. Letovanec, P. Zygoura, P. Smyth, A. Soltermann, L. Bubendorf, E.M. Speel, A. Marchetti, D. Nonaka, K. Monkhorst, H. Hager, M. Martorell, A. Sejda, R. Cheney, J. Hernandez-Losa, E.K. Verbeken, W. Weder, S. Savic, A. Di Lorito, A. Navarro, E. Felip, A. Warth, P. Baas, P. Meldgaard, F. Blackhall, A. Dingemans, H. Dienemann, R. Dziadziuszko, J.F. Vansteenkiste, T.R. Geiger, J. Sherlock, J. Schageman, U. Dafni, R. Kammler, K. Kerr, E. Thunnissen, S. Peters, R. Stahel, O. Behalf Of The Etop Lungscape Consortium
- Abstract
Background:
The reported prevalence of ALK rearrangement in NSCLC ranges from 2%-7%, depending on population and detection method. The primary standard diagnostic method is fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Recently, immunohistochemistry (IHC) has also proven to be a reproducible and sensitive technique. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has been advocated and most recently the advent of targeted Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) for ALK and other fusions has become possible. This is one of the first studies comparing all 4 techniques in resected NSCLC from the large ETOP Lungscape cohort.
Methods:
96 cases from the ETOP Lungscape iBiobank (N=2709) selected based on any degree of IHC staining (clone 5A4 antibody, Novocastra, UK) were examined by FISH (Abbott Molecular, Inc.; Blackhall, JCO 2014), central RT-PCR and NGS. H-score 120 is used as cutoff for IHC+. For both RT-PCR and NGS, RNA was extracted from the same formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues. For RT-PCR, primers were used covering the most frequent ALK translocations. For NGS, the Oncomine™ Solid Tumour Fusion Transcript Kit was used, allowing simultaneous sequencing of 70 ALK, RET and ROS1 specific fusion transcripts associated with NSCLC, as well as novel ALK translocations using 5’-3’ ALK gene expression ‘Imbalance Assay’.
Results:
NGS provided results for 90 cases, while RT-PCR for 77. Overall, 70 cases have results for all 4 methods, with fully concordant 60 (85.7%) cases (49 ALK-, 11 ALK+). Before employing the ‘Imbalance Assay', in 5 of the remaining 10 cases, NGS differs from the other methods (3 NGS-, 2 NGS+), while in the other 5, NGS agrees with RT-PCR in all, IHC in 2, and FISH in 1. Using the concordant result of at least two of the three methods as true negative/positive, the specificity and sensitivity of the fourth is 96/94/100/96% and 94/94/89/72% for IHC/FISH/RT-PCR/NGS, respectively (incorporating imbalance: NGS sensitivity=83%). Imbalance scores are presented here for 18 NGS- cases: 9 ‘NGS-/FISH+/IHC+’, 9 ‘NGS-/FISH-/IHC-‘. Among the ‘NGS-/FISH+/IHC+’, there is strong evidence of imbalance in 4 cases (score’s range: 0.0144-0.0555), uncertain in 5 (range: 0.0030-0.0087), and no evidence (scores≤0.0004) in the 9 negative cases.
Conclusion:
NGS is a useful screening tool for ALK rearrangement status, superior to RT-PCR when RNA yield is limited. When using NGS, it is critically important to integrate the 5’-3’ imbalance assay and to confirm with one or more additional methods in the ‘imbalance’ cases. Data further highlight the possibility of missing actionable rearrangements when only one screening methodology is available.
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- Abstract
Background:
Detecting mutations is becoming important for both predicting disease progression and drug responses to treatment of cancer patients. Current mutation detection methods for cancer diagnosis are mainly based on the invasive sampling technique such as a tissue biopsy, but some patients may not available for this invasive procedure. Therefore, circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) would be a good alternative for those patients. However, testing methods for tissue biopsy sample are not applicable to ctDNA samples due to relatively lower sensitivity. A highly sensitive assay method is required for detecting mutations in liquid biopsy samples.
Methods:
We have developed a highly sensitive and simple method to detect somatic mutation from ctDNA in patient’s plasma. This new real-time PCR-based testing method (PANAMutyper™) has maximized unique properties of peptide nucleic acid (PNA). It contains a PNA clamp and PNA detection probes in the each reaction tubes. A optimized PNA clamp can tightly bind to only wild-type DNA sequences, and then suppress amplification during the PCR reaction. Meanwhile, a PNA detection probe that conjugated with a fluorescent dye and a quencher, can detect a specific target mutant-type DNA and each mutation can be genotyped by melting peak analysis. PANAMutyper™ is able to detect 47 different mutations in exon 18, 19, 20 and 21 of EGFR gene with detection limits as low as 0.01%.
Results:
In order to confirm the validity in real condition, we conducted spiking test. Ten of mutant clones DNA were used as standard materials. (G719A, G719S, G719S, S768I, Exon19 deletion, two Exon20 insertion, T790M, L858R, L861Q). Mix the each mutant clone DNA and human plasma to 1, 10, 100, 1000 copies per microliter concentration. And then we extracted ctDNA from prepared sample. As a result, all of ten mutant clone DNA was detected 1 copy/㎕. This result suggest that PANAMutyper™ is applicable to ctDNA derived from patient’s plasma sample.
Conclusion:
The high concordance, specificity, and sensitivity of this test have demonstrated that EGFR mutation status can be accurately assessed by PANAMutyper™ using ctDNA. Therefore, PANAMutyper[TM] can be used in various clinical areas including companion diagnostics and monitoring acquired mutations.
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P1.02-027 - A Comparative Analysis of Different Cytological Samples for the Assessment of ALK Gene Rearrangements in NSCLC Patients (ID 5160)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.D. Lozano Escario, L. Mejias, M. Abengozar, T. Labiano, J.C. Subtil, A. Gurpide, M. Aguirre, N. Gomez, M.E. Echarri, M.A. Maset, J. Arabe, P. Panadero, J.J. Paricio, M.A. Idoate, J.I. Echeveste
- Abstract
Background:
Determination of ALK gene rearrangements has been traditionally performed in biopsies and/or surgical specimens. However, advanced lung cancer is often diagnosed by FNA cytology obtained through minimally invasive procedures, and frequently cytological specimens are the only samples available, thus emphasizing the necessity to expand ALK analysis to cytologic specimens. We assessed the feasibility of determining ALK gene rearrangements in different types of cytological samples.
Methods:
We studied prospectively 268 cytological samples from 268 NSCLC patients for ALK gene rearrangements by FISH (Vysis LSI ALK Dual Color Break Apart and ZytoLight SPEC ALK Dual Color Break Apart). Tumour samples were obtained by bronchoscopy -FNA in 45 cases (19.79%), EBUS-FNA in 63 (23.50%), EUS-FNA in 56 (20.89%), CT-FNA in 28 (10.44%), Ultrasonography guided-FNA in 24 (8.95%), and direct FNA in 23 cases (8.58%). Two cavity fluids (0.74%), 4 imprints from surgical specimens (1.49%), and 22 cases received for consultation (8.20%) were also studied. ROSE was done in all FNA procedures. FISH was performed on stained smears in 133 cases (49.62%) (114 Papanicolau and 19 Diff-Quick), ThinPrep in 48 (17.91%), SurePath in 12 (4.47%), and cell block in 75 cases (27.98%). All cases were tested for EGFR and KRAS mutations.
Results:
Two hundred thirty five samples (87.68%) were adequate for FISH analysis. Fifteen cases (5.59%) had ALK gene rearrangements. One case had a concurrent EGFR mutation in exon 21 plus the T789M mutation, and two had also KRAS mutations (G12D and G12C respectively). FISH study was unsuccessful in 33 cases (12.31%): 8 from stained smears (6.01%), 12 from ThinPrep (25%), 8 from SurePath (66.66%), and 5 from cell blocks (6.66%). Correlation cytological / paraffin embedded samples was performed in 10 cases with a concordance rate of 100%.
Conclusion:
ALK gene rearrangements may be definitely detected in cytological samples and particularly in direct smears. Both, Papanicolau and Diff-Quick smears are suitable samples for FISH analysis. The nuclei on cytology smears are not truncated, which allows for the detection of the true number of FISH signals in a nucleus. It is mandatory an exquisite management and care of the samples to preserve quality. Coexistence of ALK gene rearrangements and EGFR and KRAS mutations were observed in one and two cases respectively, indicating that such alterations are not necessarily mutually exclusive
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- Abstract
Background:
Cytological materials are widely used in diagnosis and staging of lung cancer due to advanced stage of disease at the time of presentation. Mutational oncogenic drivers in pulmonary adenocarcinoma (ADC) include EGFR, Kras and Her-2/neu. We utilized archived FNA smears and pleural effusion samples of ADC for detection of oncogenic molecular drivers.
Methods:
Pleural fluids (36) and May Grunwald stained FNA smears (18) were used for mutation anaysis. Sanger sequencing and ARMS and Scorpions PCR performed. Each tumor sample was evaluated for all classes of genomic alterations, including base-pair substitutions, insertions/deletions, as well as intronic/CDS polymorphisms.
Results:
There were 31 males and 23 females, aged 18 to 82 years with mean age 65.5 years. A total of 9 patients (16.6%) were found positive for EGFR mutations (Table 1, Figure 1). EGFR exon 18 intronic poylmorphism was seen in 4 cases and EGFR exon 20 showed intronic and CDS polymorphism in most cases. However, none of the cases were found to be positive for EGFR, exon 18, 20, Kras and Her-2/neu mutation. Figure 1 Figure 2
Conclusion:
These findings verify the feasibility of analysis of oncogenic drivers in cytological specimens in advanced ADC. Stained aspiration smears can be used after establishing diagnosis and checking adequacy of the specimen.
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P1.02-029 - Infrequent Staining Patterns in ALK Immunohistochemistry: Correlation with Fish Analysis (ID 5208)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P.X. De La Iglesia, M.L. Dalurzo
- Abstract
Background:
AKL gene rearrangements are predictive alterations in non small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC). Immunohistochemistry (IHC) has become a valuable tool in assessing ALK status, however unusual staining patterns, such as heterogeneous diffuse moderate and focal intense stains, may occur and can make evaluation difficult.
Methods:
We correlated immunohistochemistry unusual staining patterns with ALK status by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Of 851 cases tested, we found 14 (1.6%) cases with inconclusive staining patterns that can be summarized in: a) diffuse granular cytoplasmic moderate stain, with or without background mucin stain (10 cases) b) focal intense granular cytoplasmic stain in overall negative or weakly positive tumors (4 cases). IHC was performed on an automatized Benchmark staining module using Ventana ALK (D5F3) CDx assay with Optiview amplification kit. FISH was performed using ALK break-apart probe set (Vysis LSI ALK Dual Color, Abbott Molecular). Cases were considered ALK-FISH positive if ≥15% tumor cells showed split red and green signals (separation of 2 diameters or more) and/or single red signals
Results:
Of 10 moderate granular cytoplasmic stain cases, 4 had also abundant mucin backround stain 6 where markedly heterogeneous with areas of weak and moderate cytoplasmic granular stain. Nine were FISH negative, one yielded no signals (uninformative result) and one specimen corresponded to an acid decalcified specimen and was not evaluated by FISH. Focal intense stain was observed in 5 samples, 3 corresponded to surgical specimens and the rest to small needle biopsies, one of the surgical specimens was FISH positive and the rest, negative.
Conclusion:
Since FDA approval of Ventana ALK (D5F3) IHC CDx Assay, IHC has become a widely used tool for assessing ALK status. Guidelines suggest that weak granular stain should be interpreted as negative and focal intense granular stain in any number of cells, as positive. Even though our sample is small, moderate granular stain was consistently negative by FISH analysis, however, focal intense stain shows more discordant results between tests. To date, no suggestions are made on what should be the minimum amount of tumor in a sample to report an IHC assay. Even though some of these patients with IHC positive/FISH negative results have been reported as responders to Crizotinib, further studies are needed. One specimen with moderate cytoplasmic IHC stain was uninformative due to lack of signals. This raises the issue of the need to standardize preanalytical variables, which can be difficult in some areas of Latin America.
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- Abstract
Background:
ALK and ROS1 gene rearrangements are distinct molecular subsets of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and they are strong predictive biomarkers of response to ALK/ROS1 inhibitors, such as crizotinib. Thus, it is clinically important to detect patients who will benefit from such treatment and develop an effective screening strategy. In this study, we aim to evaluate the diagnostic performance of ALK/ROS1 RUO FISH probes which can concurrently detect ALK and ROS1 rearrangements.
Methods:
The study populations were composed of three patient cohorts with histologically confirmed lung adenocarcinoma (ALK rearrangement, ROS1 rearrangement and both wild type). Patient specimens consisted of 12 ALK-positive, 9 ROS1-positive and 21 ALK/ROS1-wild type formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples obtained from surgical resection or excisional biopsy. ALK rearrangement status was determined by Vysis LSI Dual Color Break Apart Rearrangement Probe (Abbott Molecular, Abbott Park, IL, USA) and ROS1 rearrangement status was assessed by ZytoLight SPEC ROS1 dual color break apart probe (Zytovision. Bremerhaven, Germany). All specimens were re-evaluated by ALK/ROS1 Break Apart FISH RUO 4-color kit. FISH images were scanned via the BioView Duet and interpreted remotely via BioView SoloWeb.
Results:
A total of 42 patient samples were evaluated. The concordance of results obtained from ALK/ROS1 Break Apart FISH RUO 4-color kit was evaluated relative to the ALK and ROS1 rearrangement status of the specimen, as previously determined. One ROS1-positive and 2 wild-type samples were excluded from analysis due to high background. Regarding 12 ALK-positive samples, 12 were ALK-positive by ALK/ROS1 RUO FISH, showing 100% (n=12/12) sensitivity to predict ALK rearrangement. Regarding 8 ROS1-positive samples, 6 cases were ROS1-positive by ALK/ROS1 RUO FISH, showing 75% (n=6/8) sensitivity to predict ROS1 rearrangement. Two cases showed weak ROS1 signals that could not be enumerated. Regarding 19 wild type cases, 18 cases were negative by ALK/ROS1 RUO FISH, showing 95% (n=18/19) specificity, while one case showed poor ROS1 signals which could not be properly enumerated.
Conclusion:
ALK/ROS1 RUO FISH can detect ALK and ROS1 rearrangements simultaneously in NSCLC. The fluorescence of ROS1 signal may be weakened by slide shipment and remote scoring.
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P1.02-031 - Mutations in TP53, PIK3CA, PTEN and Other Genes in EGFR Mutated Lung Cancers: Correlation with Clinical Outcomes (ID 5254)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P. Vanderlaan, D. Rangachari, S. Mockus, V. Spotlow, H. Reddi, J. Malcom, M. Huberman, L. Joseph, S. Kobayashi, D.B. Costa
- Abstract
Background:
The degree and duration of response to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors in EGFR mutated lung cancer are heterogeneous. We hypothesized that the concurrent genomic landscape of these tumors, which is currently largely unknown in view of the prevailing single gene assay diagnostic paradigm in clinical practice, could play a role in clinical outcomes and/or mechanisms of resistance.
Methods:
We retrospectively probed our institutional lung cancer patient database for tumors harboring EGFR kinase domain mutations that were also evaluated by more comprehensive molecular profiling, and assessed tumor response to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs).
Results:
Out of 171 EGFR mutated tumor-patient cases, 20 were sequenced using at least a limited comprehensive genomic profiling platform. 50% of these harbored concurrent TP53 mutation, 10% PIK3CA mutation, and 5% PTEN mutation, among others. The response rate to EGFR TKIs, the median progression-free survival (PFS) to TKIs, the percentage of EGFR-T790M TKI resistance and survival were higher in EGFR mutant/TP53 wild-type cases when compared to EGFR mutant/TP53 mutant tumors; with a significantly longer median PFS in EGFR-exon 19 deletion mutant/TP53 wild-type cancers treated with 1st generation EGFR TKIs.
Conclusion:
Concurrent mutations, specifically TP53, are common in EGFR mutated lung cancer and may alter clinical outcomes. Additional cohorts will be needed to determine if comprehensive molecular profiling adds clinically relevant information to single gene assay identification in oncogene-driven lung cancers.
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P1.02-032 - Diagnosis and Treatment of EGFR Mutated NSCLC among Arabic Patients (ID 5306)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.T. Moskovitz, M. Wollner, M. Abu-Amna, A. Agbaria
- Abstract
Background:
About 15% of western patient population with advanced NSCLC harbor the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation compared to about 50% in the Asian population. These mutations are more frequently found in NSCLC with an adenocarcinoma histology, in women, East Asians and never smokers. EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are the first-line treatment of choice for NSCLC patients harboring EGFR mutation. Nowadays there is only a scares information regarding EGFR epidemiology and response to EGFR TKI among other ethnicities, although there has been limited reports regarding increased rate of EGFR mutation among arabic patients.
Methods:
Single institution retrospective analysis of serial advanced NSCLC patients tested for EGFR mutation in 2011-2015. Information was obtained using the medical records.
Results:
Of 616 patients with advanced NSCLC tested for EGFR in our institutions in 2011-2015, there were a total of 134 Arabic patients, 38 of them harboring EGFR mutation (28%), as opposed to 64 (13%) among the non-arabic population. Twenty patients had exon 19 deletion, 9 patients had L858R and 1 patient had exon 21 mutation. The median age at diagnosis was 58 (39-80), 22 patients were males and 16 females, of them- 13 were never smokers, 5 are previous smokers, and 20 are active smokers. Thirty-six patients had adenocarcinoma histology while 2 patients had carcinosarcoma and squamous cell carcinoma. The median survival was longer than 9 months. Thirty patients were treated with EGFR TKI, 27 of them as 1[ST] line treatment, and 3 as 2[ND] line treatment. Of the 30 patients treated with EGFR TKI, 69% had partial response, 16% had stable disease.
Conclusion:
Among Arabic patients with NSCLC, the frequency of EGFR mutation is higher than in western population, and is more frequent among males and smokers. The response to EGFR TKI matches the reported literature.
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- Abstract
Background:
Histomorphologic changes are known to be associated the acquired resistance of the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKI) treatment. Rebiopsy is usually used to detect the underlying molecular mechanism of resistance, however meticulous histologic examination is very important to identify the change of cancer phenotype. Here we tried to investigate histomorphologic changes between the initial and rebiopsy specimens.
Methods:
We retrospectively evaluated the initial biopsy and rebiopsy specimens of 60 patients with acquired resistance to EGFR-TKI between 2010 and 2016 in Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Republic of Korea. EGFR mutation tests were performed in all specimens. Various histologic parameters including spindle cell components, discohesive growth pattern and stromal change, subtype of the tumor and nuclear grade were evaluated. In addition, immunohistochemistry (IHC) for epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers (E-cadherin and vimentin) and neuroendocrine markers (CD56 and synaptophysin) was perfomed.
Results:
In rebiopsy specimens, 18 cases (30%) showed changes of cellular morphology including spindle cell components and discohesive growth pattern representing EMT features. On IHC, acquisition of vimentin expression in spindle cell components and decreased expression of E-cadherin in adenocarcinoma of rebiopsy specimens were identified. Furthermore, histologic transformation to small cell carcinoma (2 cases, 3.3%) with expression of neuroendocrine markers and squamous differentiation (2 cases, 3.3%) were observed.
Conclusion:
In this study, histologic transformation to EMT is the most frequent finding in rebiopsy samples of the patients with EGFR-TKI resistance while small cell carcinoma has been known to be the most common in the literaturesAlthough EMT has been reported to be about 5% of EGFR-TKI resistance, we observed it in approximately 30% of our rebipsy cases. These findings suggest that detailed and meticulous pathologic evaluation plays an important role to find delicate histomorphologic changes associated with EGFR-TKI resistance.
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P1.02-034 - EGFR Mutations and ALK Translocations in Lung Cancer - A National Study (ID 5376)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E. Jakobsen, K. Ege Olsen, M. Iachina, A. Green
- Abstract
Background:
The Danish Lung Cancer Registry (DLCR) has since 2003 reported all cases of lung cancer in Denmark. Since 2012 data on EGFR mutations and ALK translocations have been included. Little is known on the distribution of EGFR mutations and ALK translocations on a national level in a primarily Caucasian population like the Danish lung cancer population.
Methods:
All Danish lung cancer patients are ascertained based on coded information in the National Patient Register. Supplementary information for each patient is obtained from the clinical units as well as from the National Pathology Register (NPR). Based on SNOMED coding by all departments performing lung cancer pathology evaluation and registered in the NPR the subgroups of lung cancer are identified. The patients are tested for EGFR mutations and ALK translocations according to national guidelines and the results are registered in the NPR. It is estimated that 95 % of all Danish lung cancer patients are present or former smokers and that the sex distribution is equal between the sexes.
Results:
4667 patients diagnosed in 2015 are included. Table 1. Distribution of EGFR mutations and ALK translocation in the 2015 lung cancer population: Figure 1 83.3 % of all patients with lung cancer and adenocarcinoma in Denmark are tested for EGFR mutations and 9.4 % are positive. 73.1 % of adenocarcinomas are tested for ALK translocations and 1.4 % is found to be positive. In total only 8.8 % of all tested lung cancer patients are found to be EGFR mutated and 1.3 % has an ALK translocation.
Conclusion:
Data from primarily Asian lung cancer populations have shown significant higher rates of EGFR mutations and ALK translocations that the findings in this Danish population. Based on these data the cost-effectiveness of the chosen strategy for reflex testing lung cancer patients up front should be reconsidered.
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P1.02-035 - Concomitant Driver Mutation Determines Tumor Growth in EGFR Mutation-Positive Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 5397)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Nagayama, T. Karasaki, H. Kuwano, J. Nitadori, M. Sato, M. Anraku, H. Matsushita, K. Kakimi, J. Nakajima
- Abstract
Background:
In the practice of precision medicine, understanding tumor characteristics in the individual patient is crucial. The aim of this study was to analyze tumor aggressiveness from two perspectives: actual growth rate calculated from the tumor; and molecular profiles obtained by next-generation sequencing.
Methods:
Participants comprised patients who underwent preoperative CT two or more times. DNA and RNA of 10 lung adenocarcinoma tumor samples were extracted. Whole-exome and -transcriptome data were obtained, and somatic mutations were detected. Preoperative CT scans were retrospectively reviewed and volume doubling time (VDT) of each tumor was calculated using a modified Schwarz equation.
Results:
Median VDT was 104 days (range, 42-653 days). Median number of somatic missense mutations was 20 (range, 7-306). EGFR mutations were present in 6 patients. Patients were divided into two groups by VDT for further analyses: Slow group with VDT ≥104 days (n=5); and Rapid Group with VDT <104 days (n=5). All patients with EGFR mutation without concomitant KRAS mutation were in the Slow Group. In contrast, a patient with concomitant mutations of EGFR and KRAS showed a considerably rapid growing tumor with a VDT of 45 days. A patient with concomitant mutations in EGFR and PIK3CA had a relatively slow-growing tumor, although VDT was the shortest in the Slow Group (120 days). Figure 1
Conclusion:
EGFR mutation was associated with slow growth of the tumor, although the growth rate may be influenced by concomitant mutation of other driver genes. This may be one of the reasons that the clinical response of tyrosine kinase inhibitors are poor in some patients with EGFR mutation. Assessment of tumor aggressiveness by molecular profiling and by sequential CT are both important for the practice of precision medicine.
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P1.02-036 - An EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Sensitive Patient-Derived Lung Cancer Xenograft Model without Classical Sensitizing Mutations (ID 5398)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): H. Notsuda, M. Li, C. Ng, N. Liu, V. Raghavan, C. Zhu, N. Pham, G. Liu, F. Shepherd, M.S. Tsao
- Abstract
Background:
Mutations in the tyrosine kinase (TK) domain of EGFR are oncogenic driver in 10-20% of lung adenocarcinoma (AdC) patients in Western countries. Approximately 90% of EGFR-TK inhibitor (TKI) sensitizing mutations occur as small in-frame deletions in exon 19 or L858R point mutations in exon 21. Recently, novel driver mutations in EGFR with oncogenic and TKI sensitizing activity have been reported. We present here an AdC patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model (PDX12) that is highly sensitive to EGFR-TKI, yet failed to demonstrate classical TKI sensitizing mechanisms.
Methods:
Comprehensive genomics profiling was used to characterize the genotype of PDX12, which was established from a resected stage IIIA AdC patient grafted in NGS mouse. The primary human lung cancer cell line (PHLC12) was extracted from its PDX model (PDX12). Aberrant EGFR cell lines used were H3255 (L858R), H2935 (exon 19 deletion), H1975 (L858R and T790M), and H1944 (wild type). Cell viability was assessed after erlotinib treatment at 1nM - 2μM for 72 hours using MTS assay. Levels of EGFR activation in both pre- and post-treatment by Western blot analysis.
Results:
PDX12 model had no known oncogenic mutations (EGFR wild type) on exons 18-21 by next-generation sequencing, RT-qPCR, and SISH, but was highly sensitive to EGFR-TKI. The IC50 to erlotinib treatment at 72 hr was 67.13 ± 7.63 nM for PHLC12, compared to 9.70 ± 2.64 nM for H3255, 64.88 ± 8.49 nM for HCC2935, > 2 μM for H1975, and > 2 μM for H1944 EGFR mutant or wild type cells, respectively. Western blot analysis demonstrated a relatively higher molecular weight band for EGFR protein with high expression level in PHLC12 when compared to other lung cancer cell lines. Using RT-qPCR, relative expression level of each EGFR domain (extracellular, tyrosine kinase, and c-terminal domain) in PHLC12 showed no difference compared to EGFR wild type. Phosphorylation status of EGFR in PHLC12 was similar in activity as compared to erlotinib sensitive cell lines.
Conclusion:
PHLC12 represents an enigmatic EGFR TKI sensitive lung PDX model without classical TKI sensitizing aberrations. Additional potential mechanisms of EGFR dependency including exon duplication, or post-translational modification of EGFR protein are being investigated.
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P1.02-037 - Mutations of EGFR and KRAS Genes in Belorussian Patients Wich Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 5564)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Mikhalenka, A. Shchayuk, E. Krupnova, M. Shapetska, N. Chebotaryova, S. Pissarchik
- Abstract
Background:
Mutations of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) cause increased activation of EGFR and sensitivity of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). The effectiveness of TKIs also depends on mutations of the KRAS gene that encodes small GTPase that is activated in response to a signal from EGFR and transmits it to the cascade of tyrosine kinases. Treatment of patients with KRAS mutations by TKIs is inefficient. Therefore, the research of these alterations plays an important role in determining the possibility of additional factors prognosis of NSCLC and adjusting individual tumor therapy. The aim of this study is to identify mutations in the exons 19 and 21 EGFR gene and in the exon 2 KRAS gene in patients with NSCLC.
Methods:
Analysis of mutations in the EGFR and KRAS genes was performed by PCR followed by sequencing DNA, which was extracted from the tumor and non-tumor lung tissues and blood samples of 97 patients with NSCLC (71 men, 26 women). 51 people have an adenocarcinoma (AC) and 46 people - squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).
Results:
Analysis of mutations in the EGFR gene showed that the frequency of classical mutations is 5,2% of deletions in exon 19 (p.E746_A750del and p.L747_P753>S) and 1,1% of p.L858R mutation in exon 21. All mutations were detected only in the tumor tissue of non-smoking women with AC. Thus, 27,3% of women with AK are carriers of mutations in EGFR gene. These types of mutations were not detected among men. Also in the researched group was identified silent mutation c.2508C>T in exon 21 in the tumor, non-tumor tissue and blood among 3,3% of patients. Analysis of mutations in exon 2 KRAS gene detected 3 types of mutations: p.G12D (1,03%), p.G12C (2,06%) и p.G13C (1,03%). The frequency of all mutations was 4,1% in the total group of patients. The mutations were found only in tumor tissues of men. 75% of mutations carriers are smokers. Analysis of KRAS gene mutations in association with the development of a specific histological type of lung cancer showed that mutations are more common in patients with AC (5,9%) than in patients with SCC (2,2%).
Conclusion:
Thus, in the researched group of patients mutations in the EGFR gene were found only among non-smoking women with AC, mutations in the EGFR gene were detected only among men independently of histological type of NSCLC.
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P1.02-038 - Over- Expression of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 1 (EGFR1) Gene in Serum of Adenocarcinoma Lung at a Tertiary Level Centre in North India (ID 5583)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.A. Ansari, A. Mohan, M. Masroor, A. Saxena, K. Luthra, K. Madan, V. Hadda, G.C. Khilnani, R. Guleria
- Abstract
Background:
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a cell surface protein that binds to epidermal growth factor. Over expression of EGFR1 in tumor tissue has been observed in upto 65% of advanced non small cell lung cancer, and has shown promising prognostic potential. In this study, we compared the EGFR1 gene expression in serum adenocarcinoma lung with healthy controls.
Methods:
We analyzed 61 newly diagnosed patients of adenocarcinoma lung and 50 healthy controls. RNA was isolated from blood serum of all subjects and real time PCR (RT- PCR) was performed after complementary DNA (cDNA) synthesis. The level of EGFR1 expression in serum was calculated by relative quantification method and expressed as fold-increase compared to compared with controls. Expression levels were also correlated with various clinico- pathological parameters.
Results:
Out of 61 patients, 42 were males. The mean (SD) age of the entire group was 54.5 (11.5) years. Most of the patients (79%) had stage IV disease. 23 (38%) patients were current/ ex- smokers, with median pack years of 10 (range, 0.5- 100). Majority of patients had KPS of 90 (51%) and ECOG 1 (74%) respectively. Activating mutations in EGFR were observed in the tissue of 14 (21.3%) of 61 patients; of these, 9 were exon- 19 deletions and 4 were exon- 21 point mutations. In the patients, a 19.66 mean- fold increase in serum EGFR gene expression was observed compared to healthy controls. No significant association was found between EGFR expression and other variables i.e., sex, age, smoking habit, performance status, stage of disease and EGFR mutation status.
Conclusion:
Serum EGFR1 gene was over expressed by >16 fold in advanced adenocarcinoma lung compared to healthy controls. The association of EGFR expression with other clinical disease characteristics needs further exploration.
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P1.02-039 - Assessment of KRASmutations (by Digital PCR) in Circulating Tumoral DNA from Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients (ID 5593)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Á. Taus, L. Camacho, A. Hernández, G. Piquer, E. López, A. Dalmases, D. Casadevall, L. Pijuan, M. Hardy, R. Longarón, P. Rocha, A. Zafra, J. Albanell, B. Bellosillo, E. Arriola
- Abstract
Background:
KRAS mutations are detected in approximately 25% of lung adenocarcinomas (LA). Targeted therapies against KRAS are under investigation. The use of tumor biopsy for molecular testing may be challenging due to the invasiveness of the procedure, the limited material for multiple biomarker analyses and tumor heterogeneity. Mutation detection in circulating cell-free tumor DNA (ctDNA) can overcome these caveats and also be used for tracking tumor dynamics. The aim of this study was to evaluate KRAS mutation detection in plasma samples from LA.
Methods:
Plasma samples from 35 patients with histologically confirmed KRAS mutant LA were collected at initiation of chemotherapy. KRAS mutations were assessed using digital PCR technology (QuantStudio3D Digital PCR System, Thermofisher Scientific). Correlation between ctDNA and tumor biopsies in terms of mutation detection was analysed. In 5 cases plasma samples were obtained during the course of the disease to monitor clonal dynamics.
Results:
Most cases were male (71%), with stage IV disease (83%), and showed KRAS mutation on codon12 (94%). KRAS mutation was found in plasma samples in 28/35 cases, showing a concordance with the tumor of 80%. In patients whose disease was limited to thorax (stages II, III, and IVa) KRAS mutation was detected in 7/10 (70%) plasma samples. Plasma/tumor biopsy concordance in cases with extra-thoracic metastases was 84% (21/25). The 4 false negative cases had low burden of extra-thoracic disease, with bone (2 cases), brain (1 case), and abdominal lymph node (1 case) as the only metastatic location outside the thorax. KRAS clonal dynamics in plasma showed a good correlation with treatment responses in some cases (figure 1).Figure 1
Conclusion:
High concordance in the detection of KRAS mutations was found between plasma and tumor tissue using digital PCR technology, particularly in cases with extra-thoracic disease. Digital PCR allows for tracking clonal dynamics in KRAS mutant LA.
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- Abstract
Background:
Significant advances on EGFR-targeted therapy have allowed increasing availability of therapeutic options for non small cell lung cancers. For multifocal lung adenocarcinoma patients in clinic, the EGFR gene mutation is generally examined only on the largest tumor or the one containing the most tumor cells, which could omit the tumors harboring the EGFR mutation and thus loss of opportunity for the tyrosine kinase inhibitors therapy.
Methods:
A total of 58 cases of multifocal lung adenocarcinoma, including 129 intrapulmonary tumors resected surgically, was recruited for this study. The genome DNA samples were prepared from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tumor tissues. The EGFR / KRAS mutational status of each tumor was examined by Sanger’s DNA sequencing. The targeted hotspot mutations in EGFR gene included p.G719S/C/A (exon 18), p.T790M (exon 20), p.S768I (exon 20), p.L858R (exon 21), p.L861Q (exon 21) and deletions in exon 19. The hotspot mutations in KRAS gene were within codon 12 including p.G12C/V/S/R/D/A.
Results:
In this group of 58 patients with multifocal lung adenocarcinoma, 38 patients were found EGFR or KRAS mutations in their tumors. Among them, the EGFR mutations were detected in 59 tumors derived from 34 cases; while the KRAS mutations were detected in 7 tumors from 5 cases. One patient (Case 30) was identified EGFR (exon 18, p.G719A) or KRAS (p.G12A or p.G12C) mutation in her 3 tumors, respectively. It is noteworthy that there were 21 (36.2%) in the 58 cases showing the mutational heterogeneity among the multiple intrapulmonary tumors derived from one individual, and that 6 tumors harbored 2 different types of EGFR mutation. However, none of the specimens investigated contained both EGFR and KRAS mutations within a same tumor. Comparing data from the present study along with the molecular pathological diagnosis records from the Department of Pathology, among the 58 cases enrolled, 30 cases accepted routine molecular pathological examination to check the EGFR / KRAS mutation, and 28 cases did not. However, 37 out of 66 tumors from the 30 cases were tested -- only 5 patients had all their tumors examined; whereas in the rest total 92 tumors unchecked, 42 EGFR sensitive mutations were identified in this study.
Conclusion:
Current finding suggests that the EGFR and KRAS mutational heterogeneity is widely existed in multifocal lung adenocarcinomas. Therefore, reliable and exhaustive examination for EGFR / KRAS mutation should be executed in the every tumor, to provide more individualized therapy choices for the patients.
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P1.02-041 - Characterization of MET-N375S as an Activating Mutation in Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Lung (ID 5705)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L.R. Kong, N.A. Binte Mohamed Salleh, T.Z. Tan, D. Kappei, B.C. Goh
- Abstract
Background:
Over the years, significant progress has been made in the treatment of lung carcinoma. While targeting EGFR mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain and EML4-ALK rearrangements have yielded impressive therapeutic gains in lung adenocarcinoma; the rarity of genetic aberration in squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) has restricted the use of molecular-targeting agents. Next-Generation sequencing analysis has identified a high frequency of c-MET mutation in Asian lung SCC specimens, in particular the MET-N375S mutant. This study aims to characterize the functional significance and therapeutic implications of MET-N375S in lung SCC cells.
Methods:
MET (N375S) mutation in tumour tissues was verified with droplet digital PCR. c-MET mutant expressing clones were generated through site-directed mutagenesis and single cell clonal selection. The impact of MET-N375S in lung SCC cells was characterized by defining the downstream effectors (Proteome profiling), biological functions (anchorage-independent growth, invasion and migration assays), transciptomic regulation (RNAseq) and protein-protein interaction (SILAC). Novel binding partners of MET-N375S was verified using co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) and proximity ligation assay (PLA). Sensitivity of c-MET mutant to various kinase inhibitors was determined with CellTiter-Glo assay.
Results:
MET (N375S) mutation was confirmed in 9/45 lung SCC specimens (20%). Ectopic expression of MET-N375S in lung SCC cells significantly elevated the activation of downstream Src, p38 and ERK1/2 kinases, increased hsp27 expression, while enhanced migratory, invasive and anchorage-independent colony forming ability in vitro. Despite so, comparative transcriptomic analysis revealed that epithelial-mesenchymal signature genes were not induced in cells expressing mutant c-MET. On the contrary, SILAC and co-IP analyses on the MET-N375S interactome demonstrated an increase in binding affinity towards receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) as compared to wild type c-MET, which was confirmed with in situ PLA. Moreover, MET-N375S augmented in vitro sensitivity to selective MET inhibitors.
Conclusion:
These findings suggest the role of MET-N375S as an activating mutation that strongly enhance malignant transformation and metastatic potential in lung SCC cells. Mechanistically, the dysregulation of various oncogenic events could be associated with the formation of heterodimers with RTKs. Clinically, MET-N375S could be utilized as a potential predictive biomarker for patients with advanced SCC of the lung to be treated with selective MET inhibitors.
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P1.02-042 - Detection of ALK Protein Expression in Lung Adenocarcinomas, a Consecutive Series of Cases from Northeastern Brazil (ID 5741)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.C. Mendes, F. Neto, M.S. Alves, I.S. Costa, E.H. Cronenberger, F.R. Tavora, A.C. Oliveira
- Abstract
Background:
There have been very few studies on ALK status in lung adenocarcinomas in Latin American population. No prior reports in Northeastern Brazil have been published.
Methods:
We analyzed ALK protein expression with a specific antibody (D5F3 clone) with the Ventana system in a series of consecutive cases from Northeastern Brazil, a previously untested population, and correlated with histologic subtypes according to the 2015 WHO Classification.
Results:
A total of 94 patients (55% female, mean age 62 years) were tested, including 51 solid, 29 acinar, 6 lepidic, 6 papillary predominant and 2 sarcomatoid carcinomas with adenocarcinoma components. There were 9 positive cases (9.5%), 5 solid predominant, 3 acinar predominant and 1 lepidic. One of the 3 acinar cases had a mucinous component. The positive cases were more often male (p<0.05) with no significant differences in relation to age, smoking history or histologic subtype. The negative cases showed a 32% EGFR mutation rate. Follow-up will be presented.
Conclusion:
We will describe a series of consecutive adenocarciomas from a population with unknown ALK status with a higher than expected rates, and correlate with the 2015 WHO Classification of Tumors.
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P1.02-043 - Multiplexed FISH (ALK/ROS1, RET, NTRK1) in Lung Adenocarcinomas: Novel Dual ALK/ROS1 Probe and Automated Scanning System (ID 5743)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S. Hernandez, E. Conde, M. Prieto, R. Martinez, M. Rodriguez, R. Martin, L. Jimenez, L. Madrigal, B. Angulo, F. Lopez-Rios
- Abstract
Background:
Although the use of NGS (next-generation sequencing) is indeed feasible for the study of druggable rearrangements, the sensitivity and specificity of targeted NGS has been challenged on several grounds: use of fixed tissue, poor quality/insufficient sample, RNA-contamination risk or long turn-around time. Our relatively high rate of failures (7.6%) with the RNA workflow of targeted NGS (data not shown), prompted us to investigate possible alternatives. The objective of this study is to demonstrate an efficient solution based on multiplexed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for the comprehensive characterization of fusions (ALK, ROS1, RET and NTRK1) in lung adenocarcinomas (ACs). We have implemented for the first time in the literature a novel four-colour ALK/ROS1 probe and used an automated scanning system for scoring these four translocations.
Methods:
A total of 64 patients with early stage lung ACs who underwent surgery at HM Sanchinarro University Hospital were considered. All slides were carefully reviewed to identify the different histological patterns. Afterwards we performed FISH to study ALK, ROS1, RET and NTRK1 in each pattern. We used both commercially (RET and NTRK1) and non-commercially (ALK/ROS1 dual) available Vysis break-apart probes (Abbott Molecular, USA). Slides were captured and scored with the BioView (Rehovot, Israel) automated imaging and analysis system, using dedicated applications for each probe. Positive cases were all confirmed with targeted NGS (Oncomine Focus Assay[TM], Life Technologies, USA).
Results:
Seven out of 420 slides did not hybridize (1.6%). We found two ALK (2.8%) and two ROS1 (2.8%) positive tumors, while no translocations were identified in RET or NTRK1. The rearrangements were present in all the different histological patterns within a given tumour, with a similar proportion of positive cells. The two major patterns of positivity were represented. The mean percentage of positive cells was 65% (range 46 to 84%). The NGS results confirmed the FISH findings.
Conclusion:
Simultaneous FISH testing for ALK and ROS1 is feasible on a single slide. The strategy reported herein provided reduced overall scoring time and ensured sensitive counting. This model might be easier to reconcile (lower cost, shorter turn-around time, and less failure rate) with subsequent comprehensive genotyping. Therefore, it could be used prospectively in advanced lung ACs to align the use of several technologies. Acknowledgements This study was partially funded by Abbott Molecular and Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (FIS), Fondos FEDER-Plan Estatal de I+D+I 2013-2016 (PI14-01176).
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P1.02-044 - EGFR Status in a Previously Untested Population from Northeastern Brazil (ID 5751)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.C. Mendes, C.D. Nogueira, E.H. Cronenberger, M.S. Alves, F. Neto, A.F. Torres, F.R. Tavora, A.C. Oliveira
- Abstract
Background:
There is limited Brazilian data on epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene activating mutations prevalence and their clinicopathologic associations especially in the Northeast, with no previous epidemiological reports. The current study aimed to assess the relationship between EGFR mutations and histologic subtypes according to the 2015 WHO Classification.
Methods:
We assessed the frequencies of EGFR mutations in consecutive pulmonary adenocarcinomas among a population-based sample in Northeastern Brazil. A sample of 351 patients diagnosed from 2014-2016 was analyzed by direct sequencing (45.5%), real time PCR (34.1%) or next generation sequencing (20.4%).
Results:
The overall mutation rate was was 30.5%. The ratio of exon 19 deletions to exon 21 L858R mutations was 1.2:1. Three patients had T790M mutations detected after progression in use of targeted therapy. Female sex (P = 0.002), never smoking status (P = 0.002), and nonsolid subtype of ADC (P = 0.001) were associated with EGFR mutations on univariate analyses. Acinar predominant and lepidic predominant tumors had a higher rate of mutation but with no statistical significance when evaluated solely. Papillary component did not show correlation with mutations. Tumor differentiation correlated significantly with their incidence of EGFR mutations, lower in poorly differentiated tumors (p=0.005). Follow-up will be presented.
Conclusion:
We will describe a series of consecutive adenocarciomas from a population with unknown status with a higher than expected rates (higher than Southern Brazil and similar to other Latin American countries), and correlate with the 2015 WHO classification of tumors.
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P1.02-045 - Discordance (FISH+, IHC-) between FISH and IHC Analysis of ALK Status in Advanced Non Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC): A Unexpected Issue in 7 Cases (ID 5757)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Scattone, S. Petroni, A. Mangia, A. Catino, D. Galetta, L. Schirosi, L. Caldarola, E.S. Montagna, D. De Ceglia, P. Perrotti, G. Simone
- Abstract
Background:
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK ) rearrangement represents a landmark in the targeted therapy of NSCLC. Several reports showed that IHC is sensitive and specific to detect ALK protein expression, possibly alternative to ALK FISH assay. In this study the concordance between the ALK status by FISH and IHC assay has been determined in a series of 95 advanced NSCLCs; discordant cases were evaluated on the basis of the percentage and the rearrangement pattern of ALK.
Methods:
95 lung NSCLC specimens were tested for ALK rearrangements by IHC assay (ALK D5F3 antibody Ventana,CE-IVD system) and by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Clinical characteristic and response to crizotinib were reviewed.
Results:
Seven cases (7.3%) showed discordant results with ALK FISH-positive and IHC negative. Among these cases the mean number of FISH positive rearranged nuclei was 40.2% (range 20-54%). All cases showed coexistent split signals pattern positivity with mean percentage 19.1% (range 10-32%.), 5' deletions pattern positivity with mean percentage 21.7% (range 12-34%) and one case also had gene amplifications pattern positivity with percentage of 64%. The polysomy was observed in all cases with mean percentage of 45.7% (range of 16-72%). Five patients with discordant ALK FISH and IHC results received crizotinib; of them, four progressed and one has stable disease.
Conclusion:
In most of discordant cases, a coexistent complex pattern of rearrangements (deleted, invertited and amplified/polysomic patterns) of ALK positive cells in FISH analysis was observed; these complex rearranged cases were not detectable by IHC, probably due to the lack of protein expression. Considering that crizotinib inhibits the ALK protein and not specifically ALK rearrangements, it could be speculated that NSCLCs without IHC ALK expression could be not sensitive to crizotinib. The ALK FISH+/IHC negative discordant group showed a loweer percentage of nuclei positive for ALK rearrangement (19.1% in split signals and 21.7% in 5' deletions) as compared with 64% of gene amplification in one case and with polysomy (45.7%) observed in all cases. These preliminary data highlight the role of IHC analysis and of the percentage of the genetic pattern of ALK rearranged cells in FISH analysis to select patients for anti ALK treatment. Further investigation is suggested about the correlation of complex mutational findings and clinical outcome.
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P1.02-046 - ALK IHC is Highly Sensitive to Fixation Parameters (ID 5792)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): I. Loftin, R. Miller, P. Thorne-Nuzzo, A. McElhinny, P. Towne, S. Singh, J. Clements
- Abstract
Background:
An ALK genetic translocation event occurs in ~2-7% of non-small cell lung carcinoma patients (NSCLC), resulting in the constitutive expression of an active chimeric ALK protein, which leads to tumor proliferation. Ventana has developed a fully automated immunohistochemistry (IHC) assay using the VENTANA anti-ALK (D5F3) Rabbit Monoclonal Primary Antibody (ALK (D5F3)) to detect the ALK protein in formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue. ALK IHC testing is becoming more widespread in NSCLC; however, information concerning the impact of pre-analytical conditions on the ALK antigen is limited. We used human cell lines expressing ALK, generated as xenografts to evaluate the effect of Fixation Type, Time, and Delay to Fixation (Ischemia) on the ALK antigen as measured by the ALK (D5F3) antibody staining intensity.
Methods:
NCI-H2228 human NSCLC cell lines were used to generate xenograft tumors in SCID mice. In order to assess ischemia (delay to fixation) H2228 xenografts were used to model ischemia in 10% NBF. The impact of fixation on staining performance of the ALK (D5F3) primary antibody was assessed using the H2228 xenografts to model fixation type and fixation time for 10% NBF, Zinc Formalin, 95% Alcohol, Alcoholic Formalin Acid, B5, and Prefer for 1, 6, 12, 24 and 72 hours. Each of the stained slides were evaluated by a pathologist using a qualitative assessment and scored on a 0-3+ intensity scale (0 = no staining detected, 1+= weak staining detected, 2+= moderate staining detected, 3+ = strong staining detected).
Results:
Fixation in all time points in B5, Prefer, and AFA, as well as ethanol, severely compromised staining intensity of ALK (by decreasing staining intensity greater than 0.5 points). Ischemia greater than 6 hours also decreased staining intensity. In contrast, EGFR (5B7) and TTF1 (SP141) antigens were robust across a wide range of fixation times and types, as well as ischemia times.
Conclusion:
The ALK antigen is highly sensitive to fixative time, type and ischemia. The data indicate that the detection of ALK by IHC is impacted by fixation conditions. Strikingly, antigens detected by other lung antibodies (EGFR, TTF1) are more robust in comparison across a range of conditions. Standardized pre-analytical conditions are critical to achieve appropriate staining for ALK IHC and to mitigate the risk of false negative results. The recommendations for pre-analytical conditions for ALK are to fix at least 6 hours in 10% neutral buffered formalin.
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P1.02-047 - Effect of Dasatinib on EMT-Mediated-Mechanism of Resistance against EGFR Inhibitors in Lung Cancer Cells (ID 5809)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Y. Sesumi, K. Suda, H. Mizuuchi, Y. Kobayashi, M. Nishino, M. Chiba, M. Shimoji, K. Sato, K. Tomizawa, T. Takemoto, T. Mitsudomi
- Abstract
Background:
The epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) is associated with acquired resistance to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in certain non-small cell lung cancers that harbor EGFR mutations. Because no currently available drugs specifically kill cancer cells via EMT, novel treatment strategies that overcome or prevent EMT are needed. A recent report suggested that dasatinib (an ABL/Src kinase inhibitor) inhibits EMT induced by transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta in lung cancer cells. In this study, we analyzed effects of dasatinib on the resistance mechanism in HCC4006 cells harboring EGFR exon 19 deletion, which tend to acquire resistance to EGFR-TKIs via EMT in previous reports.The epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) is associated with acquired resistance to epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in certain non-small cell lung cancers that harbor EGFR mutations. Because no currently available drugs specifically kill cancer cells via EMT, novel treatment strategies that overcome or prevent EMT are needed. A recent report suggested that dasatinib (an ABL/Src kinase inhibitor) inhibits EMT induced by transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta in lung cancer cells. In this study, we analyzed effects of dasatinib on the resistance mechanism in HCC4006 cells harboring EGFR exon 19 deletion, which tend to acquire resistance to EGFR-TKIs via EMT in previous reports.
Methods:
HCC4006ER cells with an EMT phenotype were previously established by chronic exposure to increasing concentrations of erlotinib. Sensitivity to dasatinib in parental HCC4006 and HCC4006ER cells was analyzed. Subsequently, HCC4006EDR cells were established by chronic treatment with combination of erlotinib and dasatinib. The expression of EMT markers of these cells and the mechanism of acquired resistance to this combination therapy were analyzed.
Results:
Short-term or long-term, ranging OOhours to XXXmonth, treatment with dasatinib did not reverse EMT in HCC4006ER. In contrast, HCC4006EDR cells maintained an epithelial phenotype, and the mechanism underlying resistance to erlotinib plus dasatinib combination therapy was attributable to a T790M secondary mutation. HCC4006EDR cells, but not HCC4006ER cells, were highly sensitive to a third-generation EGFR-TKI, osimertinib.
Conclusion:
Although dasatinib monotherapy did not reverse EMT in HCC4006ER cells, preemptive combination treatment with erlotinib and dasatinib prevented the emergence of acquired resistance via EMT, and led to the emergence of T790M. Our results indicate that preemptive combination therapy may be a promising strategy to prevent the emergence of EMT-mediated resistance.
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P1.02-048 - MET Exon 14 Skipping Mutations and Gene Amplifications Are Not Simultaneous Events in NSCLC (ID 5881)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S. Clavé, A. Dalmases, R. Longarón, L. Pijuan, D. Casadevall, Á. Taus, J. Albanell, B. Espinet, E. Arriola, B. Bellosillo, M. Salido
- Abstract
Background:
Mutations in the MET exon 14 RNA splice acceptor and donor sites, which lead to exon skipping, have been described with responsiveness to crizotinib. Until now, patient selection has been made in view of MET amplification/high polysomy and protein overexpression, with discrepancies in positivity criteria. We investigated the prevalence of abnormal MET mutational status and the subsequent gene copy number alterations (CNAs) in NSCLC.
Methods:
We routinely tested 190 lung adenocarcinomas and adenosquamous carcinomas for MET exon 14 and flanking introns mutations by PCR-direct sequencing, and for MET gene CNAs by FISH (Abbott Molecular). Amplifications were defined as mean gene by mean centromere ratio ≥2.2, and high gains as mean gene ≥5.0. RT-PCR was performed to validate mutations leading to exon 14 skipping. We collected clinical-pathological data together with EGFR and KRAS mutational status and ALK, ROS1 and RET rearrangements.
Results:
MET alterations were found in 34 patients (17.9%): 11 mutated cases (5.8%), eight gene amplifications (4.2%), and 15 high gains (9.1%). Six out of 11 mutations were confirmed to lead to exon 14 skipping (3.2%). Remarkably, none of these exon 14 skipped cases had concurrent MET amplification nor high gains. Although, KRAS p.G12C and EGFR 19 exon mutations were found concomitant with MET mutation in two of these cases. Among the 14 confirmed MET altered cases (6 exon 14 skipped and 8 amplified): 13 patients were male (93%), with a median age of 65.7 years (range: 40-91), nine current smokers (64%) (40 pack-years, range: 20-60), and eight diagnosed in an advanced stage disease (III and IV) (57%). Correlation with c-MET protein expression by IHC is ongoing, and data will be presented at the meeting.
Conclusion:
As no concurrent MET mutated and amplified cases were found, our data support prospective identification of both, MET exon 14 skipping mutations and gene amplifications. These mutations define a new subset of NSCLC patients that should be analyzed independently of the status of MET gene copy number.
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P1.02-049 - EGFR, KRAS and ALK Gene Alterations in Lung Cancer Patients in Croatia (ID 5943)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Jakopovic, L. Brcic, M. Misic, G. Bubanovic, F. Seiwerth, G. Drpa, B. Cucevic, M. Roglic, S. Plestina, S. Kukulj, S. Smojver-Jezek, S. Seiwerth, M. Samarzija
- Abstract
Background:
Rates in targetable gene changes varies between different populations of lung cancer patients. Targetable gene changes include changes in EGFR and ALK gene, as well as KRAS gene. Primary aim of this study was to determine mutation status in purely Caucasian Croatian population.
Methods:
Rates in targetable gene changes varies between different populations of lung cancer patients. Targetable gene changes include changes in EGFR and ALK gene, as well as KRAS gene. Primary aim of this study was to determine mutation status in purely Caucasian Croatian population.
Results:
During 6 months period 324 newely diagnosed primary lung adenocarcinoma were tested. Out of 324 tested patients, 194 were males (60%) and 130 females (40%) mean age 64 years (range 35 to 88 years). Vast majority of patients were in stages 3 and 4 (more than 80%). Among males, 87% of patients were ever smokers, and among females 61% of patients were ever smokers. Significantly higher rates of evers smokers were recorded among males. EGFR mutations were present in 15.7% of patients (51 patients). There was a difference in EGFR mutation rates between males and females (5.6 vs 30.8%, p<0.0001). KRAS mutations (codones 12/12 and 61) were present in 35.8% (116) patients, and ALK translocation detected by IHC in 3.7% (12) patients.
Conclusion:
Molecular testing in primary lung adenocarcinoma patients was done in purely Caucasian Croatian population. EGFR mutation and ALK translocation rates were similar to previously published data. However, KRAS mutation rates were higher than previously published. This can be associated with high smoking rates in Croatian population.
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P1.02-050 - Acquired Resistance to EGFR Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs) in EGFR-Mutant Lung Adenocarcinoma among Hispanics (Rbiop-CLICaP) (ID 5955)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.F. Cardona, O. Arrieta, L. Rojas, B. Wills, N. Reguart, H. Carranza, C. Vargas, J. Otero, P. Archila, C. Martin, L. Corrales, M. Cuello, C. Ortiz, S. Franco, R. Rosell
- Abstract
Background:
Patients with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-mutant lung carcinoma eventually develop acquired resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). In 50% of these cases, a secondary EGFR mutation, T790M, underlies the acquired resistance. Other alterations include amplification of MET, PI3K mutations, changes in MAPK1, Her2, AXL and even transformation to small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). We assessed histological, clinical characteristics and survival outcomes in Hispanic patients with EGFR mutation after disease progression.
Methods:
34 EGFR-mutant lung cancer patients with acquired resistance to EGFR TKIs were identified as part of a prospective registry (active between January 2011 and January 2015) in which post-progression tumor specimens were collected for molecular analysis using SNaPshot tumor genotyping assay to detect mutations in EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, PI3KCA, TP53, MET and Her2, and FISH for MET, ALK and EGFR. Samples also underwent immunohistochemistry analysis for E-cadherin, synaptophysin, CD56 and PDL1. Post-progression interventions, response and survival were assessed and compared to those with and without T790M.
Results:
Mean age was 59.4±13.9 years; 62% were female, 65% were never-smokers and 53% had a performance status ≥80%; main metastatic sites were lung (16/47%), bone (20/58%), brain (18/52%) and liver (13/38%). All patients received erlotinib as first- line treatment and documented mutations were: 60% DelE19 (Del746–750) and 40% L858R. Overall response rate (ORR) with first line TKI was 61.8% and progression free survival (PFS) was 16.8 months (range, 13.7–19.9 m). After progressing to TKI, all patients were re-biopsied, of whom 16 had the T790M mutation (47.1%); 5 had PI3K mutations (14.7), 5 had EGFR amplification (14.7%), 2 had a KRAS mutation (5.9%), 3 had MET amplification (8.8%), 2 had Her2 alterations (5.8%, deletions/insertions in e20), and one had SCLC transformation (2.9%). 79.4% received treatment after progression. ORR for post-TKI treatments was 47.1% (CR 2/PR 14) and median PFS was 8.3 months (CI95% 2.2–36.6). There were no differences in PFS according to gender (p=0.10) or type of acquired alteration (p=0.63). Median survival was 32.9 months (CI95% 30.4–35.3), and only the use of post-progression therapy affected OS in multivariate analysis (p=0.05).
Conclusion:
Hispanic patients with acquired resistance to EGFR TKIs continued to be sensitive to other treatments after progression. Proportion of T790M+ patients appears to be similar to previously reported results in Caucasians.
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P1.02-051 - Concomitant Driver Mutations in Advanced Stage Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer of Adenocarcinoma Subtype with Activating EGFR-Mutation (ID 5957)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.B. Sørensen, M. Grauslund, L. Melchior, J.N. Jakobsen, E. Santoni-Rugiu
- Abstract
Background:
Patients having non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with activating EGFR-mutations benefit from EGFR-Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor (TKI) treatment. However, other driver mutations may occur simultaneously and other pathways may be amplified/overexpressed, potentially hampering efficacy of EGFR-TKI treatment. The frequency of such alterations at time of diagnosis was examined.
Methods:
All patients referred to Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital for pulmonary adenocarcinoma (ADC) from July 2013 to August 2015 were routinely tested for EGFR-mutations by EGFR Cobas RT-PCR technique (Roche Diagnostics) on DNA extracted from diagnostic tumor biopsies or cytological samples. If positive for EGFR-mutations these patients were, prior to any treatment, also tested by targeted Next Generation Sequencing (NGS; Ion Torrent Ampliseq Colon-Lung v.2 panel and PGM NGS-sequenator) for other simultaneous cancer-relevant mutations, by fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) for MET-amplification, and by immunohistochemistry (IHC) for expression of MET receptor as well as ALK fusion-protein.
Results:
Totally 512 ADC patients were tested, among whom 22 out of 282 advanced stage patients (7.8%) had activating EGFR-mutations, distributed as follows: 1 G719C-mutation, 13 exon 19-deletions, 1 T790M-mutation, 1 S768I-mutation and 8 L858R-mutations with 2 of the patients harboring EGFR-double-mutations G719C + S768I and L858R + T790M (i.e., activating and resistance mutation), respectively. Complete concordance between EGFR-mutation-status by EGFR Cobas and NGS was observed for all NGS tested patients. For one of the patients NGS analysis could not be carried out, due to lacking DNA-extract and remaining tumor tissue. NGS-analysis identified several concomitant driver mutations in the 21 analyzed patients, including one 1 with KRAS-mutation (G12V), 12 with TP53-mutations (7 in TP53-exon 5), 1 with FGFR-mutation (S125_E126insS), 2 with CTNNB1-mutations (S33C and S37F), 1 with MET-mutation (T1010I), 1 with SMAD4-mutation (R135stop), and 1 with PIK3CA-mutation (E545K). FISH and IHC for MET were successful in tumor samples from 16 and 19 patients, respectively. Three patients had concomitant MET-amplification (1 with and 1 without corresponding MET-overexpression, 1 with unsuccessful IHC), whereas 2 other patients had increased copy number (ICN; both with corresponding MET-overexpression). Interestingly, 4 of these 5 patients with MET-amplification or -ICN also carried TP53-mutations. Expression of ALK fusion-protein was not detected in any of the 22 patients with activating EGFR mutations.
Conclusion:
At time of diagnosis, concomitant mutations in other cancer driver genes can be detected in advanced EGFR-mutation-positive NSCLC of ADC subtype. These concomitant mutations may impact the response to first-line EGFR-TKI treatment and represent additional therapeutic targets.
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P1.02-052 - Signal Regulatory Protein a (SIRPA): A Key Regulator of the EGFR Pathway Demonstrates Both Tumor Suppressive and Oncogenic Properties (ID 6061)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E.A. Marshall, L. Pikor, R. Chari, J. Kennett, S. Lam, W. Lam
- Abstract
Background:
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling pathway is one of the most frequently deregulated pathways in non-small cell lung cancer. While targeted therapy prolongs survival in patients harbouring EGFR mutations, resistance to treatment eventually develops in all cases. As multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations are known to disrupt signaling pathways, the objective of this study is to perform a multidimensional analysis of signaling pathways to identify alterations essential to tumorigenesis that are overlooked when assessing a single genomic dimension.
Methods:
Multidimensional integrative analysis of copy number, DNA methylation, and gene expression profiles of 77 lung adenocarcinomas and matched non-malignant tissues identified Signal Regulatory Protein A (SIRPA) as a novel candidate tumor suppressor gene. Following validation of genomic findings in multiple external data sets, the tumor suppressive effects of SIRPA were assessed in vitro and in vivo with a panel of lung cancer cell lines.
Results:
SIRPA negatively regulates receptor tyrosine kinase signaling through activation of the protein phosphatases SHP1 and SHP2 and was found to be underexpressed in 70% of lung tumours, ranking it in the 95[th] percentile of altered genes within the EGFR pathway. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) confirmed reduced protein expression in tumors, which was found to correlate with EGFR mutation and adenocarcinoma histology. In vitro, SIRPA knockdown promoted migration while simultaneously inducing a dramatic senescent phenotype, suggesting SIRPA may act as a barrier to tumorigenesis. This phenotype is dependent upon upregulation of the CDK inhibitor p27, which hypophosphorylates RB leading to cell cycle blockade and reduced tumor growth in vivo. Importantly, increased expression of p27 resulted in mis-localization into the cytoplasm where it is known to promote an invasive phenotype. Inhibition of p27 confirmed previous findings and emphasized the importance of this pathway in lung tumorigenesis. Surprisingly, overexpression of SIRPA increased cell growth and migration, suggesting SIRPA may also possess oncogenic properties due to its regulation of multiple signaling pathways. Overexpression of SHP2 following ectopic expression of SIRPA promotes migration through the inhibition of focal adhesions. This phenotype is abrogated upon siRNA knockdown of SHP2.
Conclusion:
SIRPA is an important player in lung tumor biology, capable of acting as both an oncogene and tumor suppressor due to its ability to regulate multiple signaling pathways. Due to the complex nature in its signaling, future work should focus on elucidating how the timing of alterations to SIRPA affects tumorigenesis to design treatment strategy.
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P1.02-053 - Comparison of Two Different Commercially Available Probes for the Detection of ALK Rearrangements in Cytological Smears (ID 6083)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.D. Lozano Escario, M. Aguirre, M.E. Echarri, J. Echeveste, N. Gomez, M.A. Maset, M. Abengozar, L. Mejias, A. Gurpide, S. Martin-Algarra
- Abstract
Background:
Many patients with NSCLC are diagnosed at advanced stages. A high percentage of those patients have only cytological samples for morphological and molecular analysis. Furthermore ALK analysis by FISH has to be performed using a specific commercially available probe. The aim of this study is to compare two different commercially available probes for analysis of ALK gene rearrangements by FISH using cytological stained smears.
Methods:
We analyzed 37 cytological stained smears from 37 consecutive cases of FNA (14 Diff-Quick and 23 Papanicolau). ROSE was performed in all procedures. The status of EGFR, KRAS and BRAF was kwon in 28 patients. Two probes were used: LSI ALK BREAK APART (Vysis, Ref: 53206N38020, Izasa) was apply in all 37 cases. Additionally, in 25 of these cases we used the ZytoLight SPEC ALK Dual Color Break Apart (ZYTOVISION, Ref: Z-2124-200, Menarini Diagnostics) probe. Protocols were modified from Basel and Zytolight manufacture guidelines. In order to optimize the amount of probe and to evaluate individual nuclei, we delimited an area on each smear with no nuclear overlap.
Results:
All cases were adenocarcinomas. Two cases showed ALK rearrangement (5.4%). Of the 34 negative cases, 27 were negative-polysomic (77.14%). One case was no assessable (2.7%) due to the impossibility of getting hybridization. Concordance between two probes was 100%. No differences were found between Papanicolau and DiffQuick stained smears .
Conclusion:
FISH-ALK in cytological stained smears gives excellent results. Both commercially avialable probes showed identical performance, both are equally valid. No differences between Papanicolau and Diff-Quick stained smears were observed. In our experience, stained cytological smears are the best choice for the analysis of ALK rearrangements in NSCLC patients, keeping paraffin for cases in which adequate cytological smears are not available.
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P1.02-054 - Genomic Complexity in KRAS Mutant Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) by Smoking Status with Comparison to EGFR Mutant NSCLC (ID 6134)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.J. Redig, E.S. Chambers, C. Lydon, R. Alden, P. Jänne
- Abstract
Background:
Background: KRAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene in NSCLC and lacks an effective targeted therapy. Notably, KRAS mutations occur in both never/light-smokers and smokers. However, the relationship between smoking status and a KRAS+ tumor’s genomic complexity (mutation burden, copy number changes, concurrent mutations in key oncogenic pathways) is unclear. Similarly, the relationship between genomic complexity in tumors from never/light smokers but with a KRAS v EGFR activating mutation is also unknown.
Methods:
Methods: Targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) data at our institution from 7/13-1/16 was reviewed to identify KRAS+ NSCLC tumors. All patients with a <10 pack-year (py) smoking history (NS) and a subset of heavy smokers (HS) (>40 py) were identified, with clinical and genomic analysis. A comparison cohort of 48 patients with EGFR+ NSCLC was also identified. Fisher’s exact test was used to compare frequency of gene mutations.
Results:
Results: 41 NS and 104 HS KRAS patients were evaluated. NS patients were more likely to be female (34/41 v 66/104, p<.01) and diagnosed with Stage I disease (14/41 v 13/104, p<.01). Compared to KRAS NS patients, tumors from KRAS HS patients were also genomically more complex, with increased total nucleotide variants (median=10 v 7, p<.001) and total copy number variations (median=22.5 v 5, p<.01). Intriguingly, in the cohort of EGFR tumors, total nucleotide variants resembled the KRAS NS cohort (median=6.5) but the total copy number variants were more similar to the KRAS HS cohort (median=25). Compared to KRAS NS tumors, KRAS HS tumors were also more likely to have: a) concurrent mutation in TP53 (43/104 v 8/41, p=.012) and b) concurrent mutations/2-copy deletions in >1 tumor suppressor (TS)/tumor (panel of TP53, STK11, APC, CDKN2A/B, RB) (26/104 v 4/41, p=.042). Although the total number of nucleotide variants in the EGFR cohort was most similar to the KRAS NS cohort, TS distribution in these EGFR tumors was closer to the KRAS HS cohort (TP53 variants in 31/48 and multiple TS variants in 14/48). Finally, median OS for KRAS HS patients with Stage IV disease was 9.7m v 28.7m in KRAS NS patients (HR=0.56).
Conclusion:
Conclusions: The genomic landscape of KRAS+ NSCLC from HS patients is distinct from NS patients and includes increased total mutations and frequency of TS loss. EGFR mutant tumors share some similarities with KRAS tumors from both NS and HS patients. Overall, NS KRAS+ tumors may be a genetically distinct cohort within the broader context of KRAS+ NSCLC.
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P1.02-055 - Synthetic Lethality Dictates the Mutual Exclusivity of Oncogenic Mutations in Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 6190)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): W. Lockwood, A. Unni, H. Varmus
- Abstract
Background:
EGFR mutations are present in ~15% and KRAS mutations in ~30% of lung adenocarcinomas (LACs). Yet, as several observers have noted, no individual LAC appears to carry mutations in both, even in the setting of resistance to EGFR kinase inhibitors. The typical explanation given is that the two genes are entirely functionally redundant, thereby eliminating any selective advantage to mutation of both. In this study we tested an alternative hypothesis for this mutual exclusivity: that co-occurrence of mutations in both KRAS and EGFR is deleterious to the evolving cancer cell. Furthermore, we aimed to characterize the specific cellular effects and signalling pathways induced by mutant KRAS and EGFR co-induction and determine whether this information could be used to design new strategies to inhibit LACs.
Methods:
Next-generation sequence data for over 600 human LACs were acquired from public sources and analyzed for co-incidence of KRAS and EGFR mutation and the relationship to smoking status. Transgenic mice that express both mutant oncogenes specifically in the lung epithelium were generated to test the effects on LAC development. LAC cell lines with endogenous mutations in either KRAS or EGFR were engineered with lentiviral vectors to conditionally express the second oncogene and assessed for cell viability, gene expression and protein phosphorylation changes. Temporal phosphoproteome assessment of cells co-expressing both oncogenes is currently ongoing to determine the specific signalling pathways affected.
Results:
We confirmed the mutual exclusivity of KRAS and EGFR mutations and demonstrated that this relationship is not due to limited power to detect concurrent mutations in either smokers or non-smokers. While no effect on tumor latency was observed in transgenic mice that express both mutant oncogenes, the resulting tumors preferentially expressed only one of the two transgenic oncogenes, indicating negative selection against co-expression. Introduction of the second oncogene into LAC cells expressing either mutant KRAS or EGFR stimulated the loss of cell viability. The most prominent features accompanying loss of cell viability were vacuolization, other changes in cell morphology, and increased macropinocytosis. Activation of ERK, p38 and JNK was observed in cells expressing both mutants suggesting that an overly active MAPK signaling pathway may mediate this synthetic lethal phenotype. Lastly, this effect is dependent on functionally active EGFR, since inhibition of the EGFR tyrosine kinase with erlotinib rescued cells from the detrimental effects of co-expression.
Conclusion:
Together, our findings indicate that mutual exclusivity of oncogenic mutations may reveal unexpected vulnerabilities and therapeutic possibilities.
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- Abstract
Background:
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is one of the leading causes of cancer related death worldwide. In recent years molecular characterisation of NSCLC has led to the identification of several driver events including EGFR constitutive activation, ALK-rearrangement and ROS1 fusion. Whilst there are several mechanisms of EGFR-mutation stated in the literature, how genomic heterogeneity related with acquired EGFR resistance to second targeted agent affects response to subsequent therapy has not been noted.
Methods:
We studied EGFR-TKI, gefitinib, in an EGFR 19 deleted lung adenocarcinoma patient to assess whether tissue and liquid biopsy could be integrated with radiologic imagings to demonstrate the impact of individual actionable driver mutation on lesion specific response.
Results:
A 60-year old female, with no previous or family history of malignancy initially presented with EGFR 19 deletion mutation, ROS1 fusion negative and ALK rearrangement negative stage IV, T2aN3M1a lung adenocarcinoma detected in primary lung cancer tissue at the first diagnosis. Biopsy of this patient’s metastatic right cervical lymph node following prolonged response to gefitinb led to the loss of detection of EGFR mutation, and the novel mechanism of acquired resistance with EZR-ROS1 fusion where crizotinib was demonstrated to have good efficacy in all lesions, especially the enlarged lymphadenopathy, and also including diminishing efficacy on metastatic brain lesions. In circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), mutant EGFR levels disappeared followed by gefitinib treatment, and a recognized EZR-ROS1 fusion was meanwhile identified before crizotinib therapy.
Conclusion:
This case displays tumor heterogeneity in action, where targeted therapy selects against primary drivers, allowing for the establishment of sub-colonies with new drivers within the specific lesion. Parallel analysis of tumor biopsies when disease progressed and ctDNA monitoring showed that lesion specific radiographic responses to subsequent targeted therapies could be driven by district resistant mechanism in the separate tumor lesions within the same patient. This demonstrates that the importance of molecular heterogeneity surveillance ensuing from acquired resistance in managing NSCLC, and the usage of liquid biopsies to allow for a holistic viewpoint of the molecular landscape of this heterogeneous disease.
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P1.02-057 - Clinical Utility of ctDNA for Detecting ALK Fusions and Resistance Events in NSCLC: Analysis of a Laboratory Cohort (ID 6247)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R.C. Doebele, K.C. Banks, N.E. Ihuegbu, J. Diaz, R.B. Lanman, C.M. Blakely
- Abstract
Background:
Advanced NSCLC patients whose tumors harbor ALK fusions benefit from first line treatment with ALK inhibitors (ALKi). However, insufficient tissue for testing (QNS) occurs ~25% of the time. Patients treated with ALKi ultimately progress. Historically, identification of the resistance mechanism/s required repeat tumor biopsy. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) may provide a non-invasive way to identify ALK fusions and actionable resistance mechanisms without a repeat biopsy.
Methods:
The Guardant360 (G360) de-identified database of NSCLC cases was queried to identify 57 patients (2/2015-6/2016) with 58 ctDNA-detected ALK fusions. G360 is a CLIA-laboratory ctDNA test that detects point mutations in 70 genes and select amplifications, fusions and indels. Available records were reviewed to characterize patients at baseline and at progression.
Results:
Identified fusion partners included EML4 (n=51, 88%), STRN (7%), KLC1 (3%), KIF5B (2%). Thirty patients had no history of targeted therapy (new diagnosis or no prior genotyping, “cohort 1”); 23 patients were drawn at ALKi progression (“cohort 2”). In 6 samples, the patients’ clinical status was unknown. Three additional cases had ALK resistance mutations (F1174C, F1269A/I1171T, D1203N) detected in ctDNA but no fusion detected; historical tissue testing was ALK+. Conversely, in cohort 1, 10 (33%) were tissue QNS (7) or tissue ALK negative (3) while 4 (13%) were tissue ALK+ and 16 (54%) had unknown tissue status. As expected, no documented or putative resistance mechanisms were identified in cohort 1, although TP53 mutations were identified in 43%. Among 18 patients progressing on an ALKi, 7 (39%) contained 1 (4 patients), 2 (1 patient) or 3 (2 patients) ALK resistance point mutations (F1174C/V: 3 occurrences; G1202R: 3; L1196M: 3; G1128A: 1; L1189F: 1; I1171T: 1). Additional events co-occurring in the resistance cohort included 1 each of: BRAF[V600E], MET[E14skip], KRAS[G12], KRAS[G13], HRAS[Q61], EGFR[E330K], KIT[amp], BRAF[amp]. 5 EGFR-mutant NSCLC cases at progression harbored ALK fusions (4 STRN, 2 EML4; 1 patient had both) representing 1% of all EGFR-mutant progressing NSCLC cases in the G360 database. Four of these patients also harbored EGFR[T790M], but the presence of an ALK fusion may represent further subclonal evolution following the selective pressure of an EGFR inhibitor.
Conclusion:
These results add to the growing body of literature demonstrating that comprehensive ctDNA assays provide a non-invasive means of detecting targetable alterations in the first line when tissue is QNS as well as detecting known and novel resistance mechanisms that may inform treatment decisions at progression.
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P1.02-058 - EGFR Amplification and Sensitizing Mutations Correlates with Survival from Erlotinib in Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients (MutP-CLICAP) (ID 6335)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.F. Cardona, O. Arrieta, L. Corrales, L. Rojas, M. Cuello, C. Martin, H. Carranza, C. Vargas, R. Rosell
- Abstract
Background:
Tumor heterogeneity, which causes different EGFR mutation abundance, is believed to be responsible for varied progression-free survival (PFS) in lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) patients receiving EGFR-TKI treatment. Frequent EGFR amplification and its common affection inEGFR mutant allele promote the hypothesis that EGFR mutant abundance might be determined by EGFR copy number variation and therefore examination of EGFR amplification status in EGFR mutant patients could predict the efficacy of EGFR-TKI treatment.
Methods:
72 lung ADC patients who harbored EGFR activating mutations and received erlotinib as first line treatment, were examined for EGFR amplification by FISH. EGFR mutational and copy number status were compared with response, overall-survival (OS), and progression-free-survival (PFS).
Results:
Median age was 62-yo (r, 20-87 years), 53 patients were females (73%), and 89% have common mutations. Twenty-two (30.6%) samples with EGFR activating mutations were identified with EGFR amplification. EGFR amplification was more frequent in patients with exon 19 deletion (p=0.05) and in those with better performance status (p=0.01). Patients with EGFR gene amplification had a significantly longer PFS than those without [(25.2 months, 95%CI 22.0-38.5) vs. (12.4 months, 95%CI 5.3-19.5); p=0.002] as well as better OS [(EGFR amplified 37.8 months, 95%CI 30.9-44.7) vs. (EGFR non-amplified 27.1 months, 95%CI 12.8-41.3); p=0.009]. EGFR amplification significantly influenced the response to erlotinib (p=0.0001).
Conclusion:
EGFR amplification occurs in one third of patients with lung ADC harboring EGFR activating mutations, and could serve as an indicator for better response and survival from EGFR-TKI treatment.
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P1.02-059 - Evaluation of Plasma DNA Extraction, Droplet PCR and Droplet next Generation Sequencing Methods for Liquid Biopsy Analysis (ID 6407)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Salleh, M. Rozario, X.Q. Koh, R. Soo, R. Soong
- Abstract
Background:
The ability to detect tumour mutations from blood and other bodily fluids promises many sample access, convenience, and monitoring benefits. However, the extremely rare levels at which mutations are present in these fluids obliges the use of optimal extraction and detection methods. Here, the performance of two extraction, two droplet PCR (dPCR) and a droplet next generation sequencing (dNGS) method for blood plasma analysis was systematically evaluated.
Methods:
Limits of detection were assessed using 15 blinded healthy donor blood samples spiked with equivolume mixtures of H1975 (containing EGFR L858R and T790M mutations) and H1650 (EGFR exon 19 deletion, e19del) cells at 10%, 1%, 0.1%, 0.01%, 0.001% H1650 cells in triplicate. A series of 32 blinded blood plasma samples from non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with known tumour EGFR mutation status was also tested. Samples were processed for plasma, and 1ml plasma each underwent Qiagen Circulating Nucleic Acid and Promega Maxwell Circulation Cell Free DNA extraction processing. The plasma DNA samples were analysed using the Biorad dPCR and Raindance Raindrop dPCR method for L858R and exon 19 deletion mutations, and the 50-gene Raindance Thunderbolts dNGS protocol.
Results:
No significant difference in DNA yield and detection patterns was observed between the two extraction methods. L858R mutations were detected by both dPCR methods at 0.001% in 1/3 replicates and 0.01% in 3/3 replicates. Of 4 cases with L858R tumour mutations, mutations were detected in the same 3 plasma samples by both Biorad and Raindance dPCR (sensitivity 75%). “False positive” L858R mutations were identified in 2 (specificity 92%) and 7 (75%) cases respectively. For 8 tumour e19del mutations, the sensitivities were 38% and 25%, and specificities were 96% and 75% respectively. Of 16 clinical samples analysed by dNGS, an average of 20 mutations per sample were identified after filtering for quality, non-synomyous, and non-germline variant status. The sensitivity and specificity for detecting 2 L858R tumour mutation was 100% and 50%, and 1 e19del tumour mutation was 100% and 55% respectively. The allele frequencies for the majority of “false positives” for dPCR and dNGS were less than 5%, although some “true positives” were also detected at that level.
Conclusion:
dPCR and dNGS methods can enable detection of tumour mutations in blood, albeit imperfectly. Future work to determine optimal detection thresholds will help to maximize sensitivity and specificity.
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P1.02-060 - EGFR Mediates Activation of RET in Lung Adenocarcinoma with Neuroendocrine Differentiation Characterized by ASCL1 Expression (ID 5804)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F. Kosari, K.N. Bhinge, L. Yang, S.B. Terra, A. Nasir, P. Muppa, M.C. Aubry, J.E. Yi, N. Janaki, I. Kovtun, S.J. Murphy, H. Rahi, A. Mansfield, M. De Andrade, P. Yang, G. Vasmatzis, T. Peikert
- Abstract
Background:
Achaete-scute homolog 1 (ASCL1) is a neuroendocrine transcription factor expressed in 10-20 % of lung adenocarcinomas (AD) with neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation. Previously, we demonstrated that ASCL1 functions as an upstream regulator of the RET oncogene in AD with high ASCL1 expression (A[+]AD). In this study, we examined the potential role of wild type RET in influencing the oncogenic properties of A[+]AD. We also screened for drugs that could selectively target RET signaling and examined the role of the two RET isoform separately.
Methods:
The association of the mRNA expression for the long (RET51) and short (RET9) RET isoforms with overall survival (OS) were assessed in a case-control study of stage-1 A[+]AD patients surgically resected at the Mayo Clinic (1994-2007). Cases and controls were defined as patients who survived < 3.5 years after surgery (n= 29) and > 5 years after surgery (n=38), respectively. mRNA was isolated from FFPE tissue and analyzed by a nanostring assay. Associations of each isoform mRNA with the OS was determined by the area under the receiver operative characteristics (AUC). For drug screening, HCC1833 lung AD cells with endogenously high expression of ASCL1 were stably transfected with either empty vector or an ASCL1-shRNA. Differential sensitivities of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in the pair of syngeneic cell lines were measured by Cell-Titer Glo (Promega). Interactions between EGFR and RET was examined by co-immunoprecipitation.
Results:
Expression of RET51 mRNA was associated with poor OS (p=0.005, AUC 0.71). We detected modestly increased sensitivity to sunitinib and vandetanib in A[+]AD compared with A[-]AD cells. However, the EGFR inhibitors gefitinib and the dual EGFR and HER2 inhibitor lapatinib resulted in ≥ 10 fold higher cytotoxicity in A[+]AD cells than in A[-]AD cells. Subsequent experiments demonstrated that EGF stimulation of EGFR mediates the phosphorylation of RET in multiple A[+]AD cells. RET and EGFR were found to interact only in presence of EGF and predominantly through the long RET isoform (RET51).
Conclusion:
Herein we demonstrate that wild type EGFR predominantly interacts with the long isoform of RET (RET51) in A[+]AD cells. In the presence of EGF this results in activation of RET. High RET51 is associated with worse OS. Furthermore, compared to A[-]AD cells, A[+]AD cells appear to be more sensitivity to EGFR inhibitors. In summary, our results suggest that A[+]AD patients may benefit from treatment with EGFR inhibitors even in the absence of an EGFR mutation.
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P1.02-061 - Kinase Fusions in Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma Identified by Hybrid Capture Based ctDNA Assay (ID 7014)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Young, S. Ali, A.B. Schrock, M. Kennedy, L. Gay, J. Allen, J. Suh, V. Wang, E. Bernicker, S. Ignatius Ou, D. Vafai, J. Ross, P. Stevens, V. Miller
- Abstract
Background:
For the detection of genomic driver alterations in NSCLC, comprehensive genomic profiling(CGP) or focused molecular testing of biopsied tissue is a well-accepted approach for matching targeted therapies in first line treatment. For NSCLC patients where invasive biopsy represents a serious risk, assessment of circulating tumor DNA(ctDNA) is an emerging alternative.
Methods:
In patients with clinically advanced NSCLC, two 10 mL aliquots of peripheral, whole blood were collected and plasma was isolated. ctDNA was extracted to create adapted sequencing libraries prior to hybrid capture and sample-multiplexed sequencing on an Illumina HSQ2500 to >5000x unique coverage. Results were analyzed with a proprietary pipeline to call substitutions, indels, rearrangements and copy number amplifications.
Results:
In 288 NSCLC patients evaluated, 20 (6.9%) harbored kinase fusions. 17/20 (85%) were adenocarcinomas, all stage IV. Median patient age was 61 years (range 41-81), and 59% were female. 13 (4.5%) cases harbored ALK fusions with partners as follows: nine EML4 (one each of novel partners PPFIBP1 and CACNB4), and two with unidentified partners. All but one case had breakpoints in ALK intron 19, the remaining harboring a novel intron 17 breakpoint. Three cases (1%) harbored KIF5B-RET (canonical breakpoint intron 12), three (1%) had CD74-ROS1 (breakpoints: ROS1 intron 33(2) and intron 32(1)), and one had FGFR3-TACC3. ALK, RET, and ROS1 fusions were observed by tissue testing of NSCLC in the FoundationCore database with similar frequencies. Five patients had a biopsy with insufficient tissue for CGP; three had both sufficient tissue and ctDNA available. The remainder had no tissue available. For one patient, EML4-ALK fusion was detected in both ctDNA and tissue, collected six days apart. For another, CGP identified EGFR L858R + EGFR L709K and the patient had a durable response to afatinib/cetuximab. After progression, ctDNA assay identified FGFR-TACC3 as well as EGFR L858R. For a pre-menopausal, therapy naïve never smoker, female of east Asian heritage, both assays detected a CD74-ROS1 fusion, whereas ROS1 rearrangement was not identified by the prior use of another commercially available ctDNA test. The patient had a major radiographic response by the second cycle of crizotinib treatment.
Conclusion:
Hybrid capture based ctDNA assay can identify kinase fusions in NSCLC when CGP of biopsied tissue cannot be performed and can direct rational use of first line TKIs. This series identified a novel mechanism of acquired resistance to EGFR inhibitors, novel fusion partners and intronic breakpoints for ALK, and a case of false negative testing by another ctDNA assay.
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P1.02-062 - Consensus of Gene Expression Phenotypes and Prognostic Risk Predictors in Primary Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 3899)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Ringner, J. Staaf
- Abstract
Background:
Transcriptional profiling of lung adenocarcinomas has identified numerous gene expression phenotype (GEP) and risk prediction (RP) signatures associated with patient outcome. However, classification agreement between signatures, underlying transcriptional programs, and independent signature validation are less studied.
Methods:
Published transcriptional profiles from 17 cohorts comprising 2395 lung adenocarcinomas with available patient outcome data were collected from authors’ websites or public repositories as described in the original studies. Tumors were classified according to 18 different GEPs or RPs derived from microarray analysis of lung adenocarcinoma or NSCLC cohorts, using reported original classification schemes or consensus clustering of gene signatures on a per cohort basis. To independently assess the connection between classifications by the lung cancer derived signatures and classification by expression of proliferation-related genes only, a 155-gene breast cancer proliferation signature was used to classify all tumors as low-proliferative (average expression of the 155-genes < median) or high-proliferative. Tumors were also scored according to five reported expression metagenes in lung cancer representing different biological processes; proliferation, immune response, basal / squamous, stroma / extra cellular matrix (ECM), and expression of Napsin A / surfactants on a per cohort basis to contrast subtype classifications with biological functions.
Results:
16 out of 18 signatures were associated with patient survival in the total cohort and in multiple individual cohorts. For significant signatures, total cohort hazard ratios were ~2 in univariate analyses (mean=1.95, range=1.4-2.6). Signatures derived in adenocarcinoma generally displayed better classification agreement than signatures derived in mixed NSCLC cohorts. Strong classification agreement between signatures was observed, especially for predicted low-risk patients by adenocarcinoma-derived signatures, despite a generally low gene overlap. Expression of proliferation-related genes correlated strongly with GEP subtype classifications and RP scores, driving the gene signature association with prognosis. A three-group consensus definition of samples across 10 GEP classifiers demonstrated aggregation of samples with specific smoking patterns, gender, and EGFR/KRAS mutations, while survival differences were only significant when patients were divided into low- or high-risk resembling a terminal respiratory (TRU) like and non-TRU division, respectively.
Conclusion:
By providing this consensus of current GEPs and RPs in lung adenocarcinoma we have connected molecular phenotypes, risk predictions, patient outcome and underlying transcriptional programs of the different classifier types. Our results provide a general insight into the nature and agreement of GEP and RP signatures in the disease, and their prognostic value.
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P1.02-063 - Mutation Profiling by Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing of an Unselected NSCLC Cohort (ID 4147)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. La Fleur, E. Falk-Sorqvist, M. Sundstrom, P. Smeds, J.S.M. Mattsson, E. Brandén, H. Koyi, J. Isaksson, H. Brunnström, M. Sandelin, K. Lamberg, P. Landelius, M. Nilsson, P. Micke, L. Moens, J. Botling
- Abstract
Background:
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a heterogeneous disease, with a wide diversity when it comes to molecular variations. In the non-squamous subset a large variety of altered driver genes have been identified.
Methods:
The mutational status was evaluated in a consecutive Swedish NSCLC cohort consisting of 354 patients, who underwent surgical resection between 2006 and 2010. DNA was prepared from either fresh frozen or formalin fixed paraffin embedded tissue (FFPE) and used for library preparation using a Haloplex gene panel and subsequently sequenced on an Illumina Hiseq instrument. The gene panel covers all exons of 82 genes, previously identified in NSCLC. The panel design utilizes two strand capture and reduced target fragment length compatible with degraded FFPE samples (Moens et al., J Mol Diagn, 2015).
Results:
All previously known hotspot alterations in the driver genes KRAS, EGFR, HER2 (exon 20 insertions), NRAS, BRAF, MET (exon 14-skipping) and PIK3CA (exon 9 and 20) were analyzed in the 252 non-squamous cases, see figure. KRAS mutations were found in 98 patients (39%) whereas EGFR alterations were present in 33 (13%). The prevalence of KRAS mutations is higher than normally reported and could be due to the large fraction of smokers included in this cohort. The EGFR prevalence is a bit higher than previously demonstrated (Sandelin et al. Anitcancer Res, 2015). Mutations in the other driver genes were detected at low frequencies (HER2(3%), BRAF(2%), NRAS(1%), MET(1%) and PIK3CA(1%)). Figure 1
Conclusion:
The preliminary analysis of mutational status in this large unselected Swedish NSCLC cohort reveals mutation frequencies in the common driver genes resembling previous reports on western populations with a high smoking rate. Ongoing analysis of the remaining genes will be used for pathway analysis and could provide a more complete picture of the lung cancer pathogenesis.
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P1.02-064 - MET-Dependent Activation of STAT3 as Mediator of Resistance to MEK Inhibitors in KRAS-Mutant Lung Cancer (ID 4240)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C. Lazzari, N. Karachaliou, A. Verlicchi, C. Codony Servat, A. Gimenez Capitan, J. Codony Servat, J. Bertrán-Alamillo, M.A. Molina Vila, I. Chaib, J.L. Ramírez Serrano, P. Cao, F. De Marinis, V. Gregorc, R. Rosell
- Abstract
Background:
Targeting the MAPK pathway by MEK inhibition results in limited activity in patients with KRAS-mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The lack of effectiveness may be associated with activation of other effectors including STAT3, as well as MEK inhibition relief from negative feedback loops. Indeed, in KRAS-mutant colorectal cancer, MEK inhibition decreases the activity of the metalloprotease ADAM17, which normally inhibits MET signaling and STAT3 activation by promoting shedding of MET endogenous antagonist, soluble "decoy" MET. Herein, we explore the MET-dependent activation of STAT3 as a mediator of resistance to MEK inhibitors, and whether MET or STAT3 inhibitors can synergistically increase MEK-inhibitor-induced growth inhibition in KRAS-mutant NSCLC cells in vitro.
Methods:
Cell viability was assessed by MTT (thiazolyl blue) assay after treatment with the allosteric MEK inhibitor, selumetinib, the small-molecule dual inhibitor of the MET and ALK receptor tyrosine kinases, crizotinib, and evodiamine, an alkaloid isolated from the dried, unripe Evodia rutaecarpa (Juss.) Benth fruit, that exerts an anticancer effect by inhibiting STAT3. RNA was isolated from four KRAS cell lines and the STAT3 and MET mRNA expression analysis was performed by TaqMan based qRT-PCR. Western blotting was used to assess the effect of selumetinb on ERK, AKT and STAT3 phosphorylation.
Results:
We first evaluated the efficacy of the MEK inhibitor selumetinib in our KRAS-mutant NSCLC cell line panel using an MTT cell proliferation assay. H460 cells were relatively insensitive to selumetinib. Following 48-hour treatment with selumetinib, ERK1/2 and AKT phosphorylation were suppressed but a rebound activation of STAT3 occurred in H460 cells. We next investigated whether MET expression was related to the feedback activation of STAT3 signaling following MEK inhibitor treatment. We compared gene expression profiles of the H460 cell line before and after treatment with selumetinib. Interestingly, we found significant upregulation of MET and STAT3 mRNA expression after seven days of selumetinib treatment. To further interrogate the relationship between MEK inhibition and MET-mediated STAT3 reactivation, H460 cells were treated with the combination of selumetinib and crizotinib or selumetinib and evodiamine. A 72-hour exposure to both combinations resulted in a clear cell synergism, as measured by the combination index (CI) analysis, with a CI of 0.79 and 0.78 respectively.
Conclusion:
Collectively our results showed that the feedback STAT3 activation induced by MET, mitigates the effect of MEK inhibition, and provides rationale for further assessment of combined MEK and MET or STAT3 inhibition in KRAS-mutant NSCLC.
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P1.02-065 - Elucidating the Role of PIM Kinase and Its Therapeutic Potential in NSCLC (ID 4328)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Moore, S. Heavey, C. Lightner, L. Brady, K. O’byrne, S.P. Finn, S. Cuffe, M. O'Neill, K. Gately
- Abstract
Background:
PIM kinases are a family of three serine/threonine kinases: PIM1, PIM2 and PIM3 that have been shown to play a role in tumorigenesis. PIM1 is a downstream effector of oncoproteins ABL and JAK/STAT and regulator of BCL2/BAD and CXCR4. PIM activity is synergistic with the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pro-survival pathway and PIM2 has been shown to phosphorylate translational repressor 4E-BP1 and p70S6 independently of the PI3K pathway. Furthermore a synergism between PIM kinases and c-Myc has been reported. Here we investigate the expression of PIM1/PIM2/PIM3 in NSCLC cell lines and patient matched normal/tissue samples. The effect of a novel combined inhibitor of PI3K/mTOR/PIM kinases (IBL-301) on cell signalling, cell death and proliferation is also examined.
Methods:
PIM1/PIM2/PIM3 expression were examined by Western blot analyses in NSCLC cells (H1975 and H1838). Additionally, the frequencies of PIM1/PIM2/PIM3 expression in NSCLC patient tumour and matched normal adjacent samples (n=31) were investigated. The effectiveness of IBL-301 on cell signalling, cell viability and proliferation were examined by Western blot analysis, cell titre blue and BrdU assay respectively.
Results:
All three PIM isoforms were detected in the lung cancer cell lines tested. Similarly, all three PIM isoforms were expressed across the 31 NSCLC patient tumour and match normal adjacent tissue samples. To investigate this further PIM1 staining of FFPE tumour and match normal tissue from this cohort is currently underway. In two lung cancer cell lines, H1975 and H1838, IBL-301 was found to have a dose dependent effect on proliferation/viability with IC~50~ values in the nanomolar range. Additionally, western blot analyses have indicated that these novel drugs can suppress the phosphorylation of key players in cell signalling pathways linked to tumorigenesis including pAkt, p4E-BP1 and peIF4B.
Conclusion:
This is the first study to investigate the expression of all 3 isoforms of PIM in lung cancer specifically. All 3 isoforms were abundantly expressed across cells lines and patient tumour samples. Observed PIM expression in the immune cells of normal adjacent tissue may indicate a role in inflammation. This finding coupled with the promising in vitro data demonstrate the therapeutic potential of targeting PIM in NSCLC.
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P1.02-066 - Genomic Profiling in the Differential Diagnostics of Pulmonary Tumours: A Case Series (ID 4441)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Ericson Lindquist, A. Johansson, P. Levéen, G. Elmberger, G. Jönsson, J. Staaf, H. Brunnström
- Abstract
Background:
Histopathological diagnosis is important for prognostication and choice of treatment in patients with cancer in the lung. Lung metastases are common and need to be distinguished from primary lung cancer. Furthermore, cases with synchronous or metachronous primary lung cancers (although infrequent) are often handled differently than cases with lung cancer with intrapulmonary metastasis or relapse, respectively. In some cases, morphology and immunohistochemical (IHC) staining is not sufficient for certain diagnosis.
Methods:
Five cases were selected where molecular genetic analysis in form of pyrosequencing or targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) was of value, not only for treatment prediction, but for certain diagnosis of tumours in the lung.
Results:
Two of the included cases were rare metastases to the lung – rectal cancer with IHC profile consistent with primary lung cancer and malignant myoepithelioma of the breast, respectively – where molecular genetic analysis was of aid for proving the relationship with the primary tumour. The other three cases had multiple lung adenocarcinomas with similar morphology where molecular genetic analysis was of aid to distinguish between an intrapulmonary metastasis and a synchronous primary tumour.
Conclusion:
Comparison of molecular genetic profile may be an important tool for determination of relationship between tumours, at least in some situations, and should always be considered in unclear cases. Further studies on concordance and discordance of molecular genetic profiles between spatially or temporally different tumours with common origin may be helpful for improved diagnostics of pulmonary tumours.
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P1.02-067 - Repeated Biopsy for Immunohistochemical and Mutational Analysis of Non Small Cell Lung Cancer: Feasibility and Safety (ID 4442)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Riudavets, G. Anguera, A. Torrego, V. Pajares, A. Gimenez, L. López Vilaró, E. Martínez Tellez, J.C. Trujillo, N. Farré, E. Lerma, J. Belda, V. Camacho, A. Fernandez, A. Muñoz, M. Majem
- Abstract
Background:
Repeated biopsy in lung cancer may be necessary at diagnosis or after cancer progression on initial therapy to properly target treatments. The objective of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and safety of repeated biopsy for immunohistochemical and/or mutational analysis in patients with non small cell lung cancer.
Methods:
We have retrospectively analyzed repeated biopsies performed in patients with advanced non small cell lung cancer during the last 4 years. The technical success rates for the repeated biopsy and the adequacy rates of specimens were evaluated. Biopsy-related complications were recorded. Clinical details were collected, specially focusing in EGFR mutation data.
Results:
110 repeated biopsies were performed in 74 patients (34 women, 40 men, mean age 63 [36-84]), the histology was: 74% adenocarcinoma, 12% squamous cell carcinoma, 11% NOS, 3% other. The mean number of repeated biopsies per patient was 1 (1-4). The main reasons for repeated biopsy were immunohistochemical +/- mutational analysis (34/110, 31%), mutational analysis (16/110, 14.6%) and EGFR at progression (28/110, 24.4%). The technical success rate for biopsy was 98/110 (89.1%), and postprocedural complications occurred in 3/110 cases: 2 pneumothorax and 1 wound infection. Biopsy specimens came mostly from primary tumor (56/110, 51%), lymph nodes (26/110, 23.6%) and pleura (9/110, 8.2%), the most used technique was bronchoscopy +/- EBUS (45/110, 40%), followed by percutaneous transthoracic lung biopsy (28/110, 26%) and thoracoscopy and/or mediastinoscopy: (19/110, 17%). Results from repeated biopsy were used to select the next line of treatment in 86/110 procedures (78%), and 40/86 of them (46.5%) allowed to include the patient in a clinical trial. 28 repeated biopsies were performed in 21 EGFR mutant lung cancer patients with acquired resistance at disease progression, T790M was detected in 13/28 (46%) of samples, corresponding to 10/21 (47.6%) EGFR mutant lung cancer patients.
Conclusion:
Our data demonstrate that repeated biopsy in non small cell lung cancer is safe and clinically feasible. Findings from repeated biopsy were used to direct subsequent treatment in 78% of patients.
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P1.02-068 - The Impact of TP53 Overexpression on EMT and the Prognosis in Lung Adenocarcinoma Harboring Driver Mutations (ID 4489)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S. Nishikawa, T. Menju, T. Soawa, K. Takahashi, R. Miyata, H. Cho, S. Neri, T. Nakanishi, M. Hamaji, H. Motoyama, K. Hijiya, A. Aoyama, T. Sato, F. Chen, M. Sonobe, H. Date
- Abstract
Background:
Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and p53 mutations are known to be pivotal for driving metastasis and recurrence in lung cancer, but the nature of these factors is not completely understood. Some papers have previously described the relationship between EMT and TP53 in other carcinomas, however there have been few reports about the impact of TP53 on EMT and prognosis in lung adenocarcinoma harboring driver mutations such as EGFR or K-ras.
Methods:
The aim of the present study is to clarify the impact of TP53 overexpression in lung adenocarcinoma with driver mutations. A total of 282 lung adenocarcinoma specimens were collected from patients who had undergone surgery in our institute from January 2001 to December 2007. Both EMT markers (E-cadherin, vimentin) and TP53 were analyzed through immunostaining of tumor specimens. The association between EMT and TP53 as well as the patients’ clinical information was integrated and statistically analyzed. EGFR and K-ras mutation were determined by single stranded conformational polymorphism and direct sequencing. Correlations were compared using Pearson's chi-square test and overall survival were compared using the log-rank test.
Results:
Both mesenchymal type (E-cadherin negative, vimentin positive) and TP53 overexpression were significantly correlated with poor prognosis (P=0.0001, P=0.0019). A positive correlation was found between EMT activation level and TP53 overexpression (P=0.017). TP53 overexpression was significantly correlated with poor prognosis in the subgroup of lung adenocarcinoma with driver mutation (EGFR or K-ras) (P=0.011, P=0.026), whereas there was no significant correlation between TP53 overexpression and the prognosis in adenocarcinoma without driver mutations (P=0.359).
Conclusion:
TP53 overexpression is supposed to be the key factor that affects EMT and the prognosis, and also might be an additional therapeutic target for lung adenocarcinoma with driver mutations.
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- Abstract
Background:
Young patients diagnosed as non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is rare. Little is known for its genomic alterations and survival. This study retrospectively evaluated the genomic alterations,treatment and prognosis with NSCLC in our institution between January 2009 and July 2014 .
Methods:
All patients were examined for EGFR, KRAS, NRAS, PIK3CA, BRAF, HER2 mutations and ALK, ROS1, RET fusion genes based on reverse transcription PCR. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate survival and comparison using the log-rank test.
Results:
Totally, 54 were with age under 40 years old among 640 patients. Among the 640 patients, three hundred and fifty eight patients were with identified genomic alterations with frequency of 55.9 %. The frequencies of genomic alterations in younger and older were 68.5% and 54.8%,respectively (P=0.05). The frequencies difference between younger and older existed in fusions genes ( 22.2% vs.4.1%,P<0.001), but not mutations genes (46.3% vs.45.6%,P=0.92). There was a trend of shorter recurrence free survival in younger than older (35.2 vs.43.8 months,P=0.050), while no survival difference was found between younger and older (50.2 vs 51.4 months,P=0.112).
Conclusion:
We concluded that younger age of NSCLC is associated with a trend of increased of harboring targeted genes and mainly with difference of fusion genes . An inferior overall survival existed in younger than older.
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- Abstract
Background:
Based upon the 2015 Lung Cancer Pathologic Classification, squamous cell carcinoma of lung (SQCC) has been classified as three types of keratinized, non-keratinized and basaloid squamous cell carcinoma (BSCC). The spectrum of common driver genes and clinical prognosis were examined for different subtypes in SQCC in present study.
Methods:
From 2009 to 2013, a total of 201 patients with completely resected stages I-ⅢA SQCC were recruited. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was utilized for detecting the mutations of EGFR, KRAS, NRAS, PIK3CA, BRAF, DDR2, HER2 and the fusion genes of ALK, ROS1 and RET. Survival curves were plotted with Kaplan-Meier method. Cox’s proportional hazard model was used for multivariate analysis.
Results:
The pathological types were BSCC (n=16), non-keratinizing (n=83) and keratinizing (n=102). The overall frequency of gene abnormality was 18.4%. The most common driver genes in a decreasing frequency were PIK3CA mutation (n=14), EGFR mutation (n=8), DDR2 mutation (n=8), KRAS mutation (n=3), HER2 mutation (n=2), ALK rearrangement (n=1) and ROS1 rearrangement (n=1). No mutations of NRAS, BRAF or RET were observed . The frequency of gene abnormality was greater in keratinized (19.6%) ,followed with non-keratinized (19.2%) and BSCC types (6.3%). Targeted therapy was offered for 35 patients, including 32 on EGFR-TKIs (EGFR mutation, n=5; EGFR wild-type, n=27), ALK-positive on crizotinib (n=1) and HER2 mutation on afatinib (n=1). The median progression-free survival (PFS) of EGFR-TKIs were 6.0 and 1.87 months in EGFR mutant and wild types respectively (P=0.004). And the PFS for those two with crizotinib and aftatinib treatment were 8.0 and 3.5 months respectively. . The SQCC patients of BSCC subtype had significantly worse overall survival than those with non-BSCC subtypes (29.0 vs.47.0 months, P<0.001).
Conclusion:
The subtypes of SQCC were associated with varying frequency of gene abnormality. BSCC had a lower frequency of common driver gene abnormality and worse survival.
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P1.02-071 - Detection of Multiple Low-Frequency Mutations by Molecular-Barcode Sequencing (ID 4554)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Namba, S. Tomida, H. Torigoe, H. Sato, K. Shien, H. Yamamoto, J. Soh, K. Tsukuda, S. Miyoshi, S. Toyooka
- Abstract
Background:
Recent advantage of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in the field of cancer genome research has revealed extreme levels of genetic heterogeneity, suggesting the major roles of subclonal mutations in cancer relapse and in rapid emergence of acquired resistance. Unlike inherited mutations, somatic variants often occur at low allele frequencies that require sensitive methods for detection. Based on the results using another highly sensitive method, such as digital PCR, the study of cancer subclones requires to detect mutations that are present in <1% frequency, however, such a level of resolution cannot be obtained by conventional NGS approaches. In the current study, we performed molecular-barcode sequencing for primary lung adenocarcinoma cases in order to analyze mutations with <1% low frequency.
Methods:
Fresh frozen tumor samples from 58 primary lung adenocarcinoma patients whose tumors previously tested positive for EGFR by conventional method (the PNA-LNA PCR clamp method) were collected. All samples were obtained from surgically resected specimen. We used HaloPlex HS method, which is a high sensitivity amplicon-based targeted sequencing method incorporating molecular barcodes in the DNA library, allowing for the identification of duplicate reads to significantly improve the base calling accuracy even at low allelic frequencies compared to conventional NGS methods. We used a panel designed for 47 cancer-related genes including EGFR, and sequenced data was obtained by using Illumina Miseq Reagent v3 (600 Cycle). Normal tissue samples were also sequenced for threshold adjustment.
Results:
Out of 58 samples, EGFR ‘major’ mutation (L858R, Exon19 deletion, G719A/S, T790M) profiles of 57 samples by molecular-barcode sequencing corresponded to those by clinical method (98.3%). The mean coverage of EGFR major mutation was 3078 (243-8285), and the minimal detectable frequency was 0.45%. Of note, we could detect the minor frequency of T790M mutation in addition to the major frequency of L858R mutation, at the allele frequency of 1.92% (20/1042) for T790M and 10.62% (155/1459) for L858R mutation, respectively. Minor genetic alterations, except major mutation, in EGFR were detected in 82.8% (48/58) cases, and the mean number was 2.3 (0-11). These results suggest the clinical applicability of this method.
Conclusion:
We could demonstrate good concordance rate between clinical examination and molecular barcode sequencing. Minor genetic alterations in EGFR were detected in 82.8% (48/58) cases. Further investigations are warranted to establish the confident detection of subclonal mutations with low frequency.
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P1.02-072 - Comprehensive Genomic Alterations Identified by Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Adenocarcinoma in Japanese Population (ID 4602)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S. Sato, M. Nagahashi, T. Goto, A. Kitahara, T. Koike, K. Takada, T. Okamoto, K. Kodama, H. Izutsu, M. Nakada, Y. Maehara, T. Wakai, M. Tsuchida
- Abstract
Background:
Therapeutic approaches to lung cancer have shifted toward an emphasis on molecularly targeted therapy in genotypic subsets of patients (pts). Recent advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have improved the ability to detect potentially targetable mutations. In this study, we aimed to analysis the genomic alterations of lung adenocarcinoma.
Methods:
A retrospective analysis of genomic data obtained from 99 archived formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples from Japanese pts with lung adenocarcinoma were analyzed by NGS panel of 415 genes. Mutations and frequency of variants present in key oncogenic drivers for each pts were quantified. Fisher’s exact and t-tests were used to identify associations between genomic alterations and clinical characteristics.
Results:
Sex: male 66 pts, female 33 pts. Smoking status: pack-year (PY) <30 (light smoker) 61 pts, PY≥30 (heavy smoker) 38 pts. Of all, the median number of mutation burden and actionable mutation were 13.5 (range 5-33) and 4 (range 1-19), respectively. The most frequent genomic alterations were EGFR (48%), TP53 (40%), CDKN2B (32%), RB1 (21%), and CDKN1B (19%). Representative genomic alterations with a FDA approved targeted therapy such as EGFR mutation (exon 19 deletion and exon 21 L858R), ALK fusion, ROS1 fusion, RET fusion, BRAF (V600E) mutation and, MET amplification were detected in 56 pts (R-GAs group) and the others were 43 pts (O-GAs group). In the O-GAs group, 39 pts had genomic alteration with targeted agent available on or off a clinical trial. As for smoking habit, R-GAs group were significantly associated with light smoker than O-GAs group (p<0.01). In R-GAs group, the median number of mutation burden and actionable mutation were 13 (range 5-20) and 4 (range 1-10), respectively. O-GAs group were significantly greater mutation burden and actionable mutation than R-GAs group (16.2 ± 6.8 vs. 12.3 ± 4.3, p<0.01; 6.5 ± 5.0 vs. 4.5 ± 2.2, p = 0.02, respectively). Of the 43 EGFR pts, there were no concurrent genomic alterations of ALK, ROS1, RET, BRAF and, MET. The most frequent concurrent mutations in EGFR were CDKN2B (37%), TP53 (28%), CDKN2A (23%), CDKN1B (21%), ARID1A (19%), RB1 (16%), and STK11 (16%). Among the EGFR cases, 38 (88%) pts had further genomic alteration with targeted agent available on or off a clinical trial excluding EGFR-TKI.
Conclusion:
With help of NGS, we found most pts might be treated by targeted therapies. Further study may emerge whether concurrent mutations, mutation burden and the number of actionable mutation are associated with survival outcome in lung adenocarcinoma.
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P1.02-073 - Characterizing the Genomes of Lung Adenocarcinomas from Never Smokers Reveals SHPRH as a Novel Candidate Tumour Suppressor Gene (ID 4772)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T.L. De Silva, V.D. Martinez, K.L. Thu, D. Lu, M. Oh, S. Lam, W. Lam, H. Varmus, W. Lockwood
- Abstract
Background:
Approximately 15 to 25% of lung adenocarcinomas (LAC) arise in never smokers. They develop through mechanisms distinct from those that affect smokers and are associated with unique histological and molecular characteristics. A significant fraction of LACs in never smokers do not have mutations in known oncogenic driver genes such as EGFR/ALK/KRAS. Furthermore, mutations in oncogenic driver genes appear to be insufficient for tumorigenesis, suggesting that additional alterations are required.
Methods:
To address these issues, we used whole-exome sequencing to comprehensively study 15 LACs from never smokers - seven “triple negative” tumors (with normal EGFR/ALK/KRAS) and eight EGFR-mutant tumors - with the goal of identifying novel mutant genes in these subsets. To identify mutated genes that confer a selective advantage a multistep approach was used to filter variants based on gene expression level, background mutation rate and gene size. Targeted sequencing of 180 genes in the original 15 and an extended panel of 85 tumor/normal pairs validated these alterations and indicated their prevalence in LAC. Sequence data was integrated with copy number and gene expression levels to determine mechanisms, and consequences, of gene disruption. Animal and cell models were used to functionally validate identified genes of interest and explore their role in LAC biology.
Results:
32 unique genes demonstrated significant evidence of conferring a selective advantage including known oncogenes (EGFR/ERBB2/MET) and tumor suppressor genes (p53/RB1/ATM). In addition, RNA-seq revealed fusions involving RET or ROS1 in one tumour each. The variations in MET consisted of truncating and splice-site mutations that we are currently investigating in transgenic mouse models. Pathway analysis indicated frequent mutation in genes implicated in PI3-kinase signaling, RNA splicing and histone modification. Importantly, we identified the hemizygous and homozygous loss of multiple genes from chromosome arm 6q - a genetic locus associated with familial lung cancer susceptibility - including a novel candidate tumor suppressor gene, SHPRH, based on its high frequency of biallelic disruption. SHPRH is an evolutionarily conserved E3-ligase that mediates crucial processes related to DNA repair. We found that SHPRH silencing increased transformation of normal lung cells, increased DNA damage and induced cell cycle changes while SHPRH inhibition sensitized LAC cells to topoisomerase II and PARP inhibitors.
Conclusion:
SHPRH inactivation may induce genetic alterations that cooperate with mutations in driver oncogenes to promote LAC development. Together, this work will expand our understanding of LAC initiation and progression in never smokers and may offer new biomarkers for response to therapy.
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P1.02-074 - The Gene Expression Signatures of Pulmonary Adenocarcinoma with Micropapillary Features (ID 5126)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Y. Sata, T. Nakajima, K. Matsusaka, M. Fukuyo, J. Morimoto, Y. Sakairi, T. Fujiwara, H. Wada, H. Suzuki, T. Iwata, M. Chiyo, A. Kaneda, I. Yoshino
- Abstract
Background:
Invasive lung adenocarcinomas have been classified into 5 subtypes by the new WHO classification, of which the micropapillary-predominant subtype is known to have a poor prognosis. However, we previously reported that lung adenocarcinomas harboring a micropapillary component (MPC) of more than 5% showed poorer disease-free survival and overall survival in comparison to the other subtypes (JTCVS 152: 64-72; 2016), despite the MPC not being predominant. Specific biomarkers for the MPC are yet to be developed for the initial diagnosis of adenocarcinoma with an MPC.
Methods:
Total RNA was extracted from snap frozen archived lung adenocarcinoma samples that had been obtained by radical thoracotomy. The diagnosis of each subtype was made by independent pathologists using formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples. Frozen sections were made using the archived frozen sample; RNA was isolated after the confirmation of the diagnosis of each sample. RNA-sequencing was conducted using 22 adenocarcinomas and 3 normal lung tissue samples. The 22 adenocarcinomas included micropapillary (n=6), papillary (n=5), lepidic (n=5), acinar (n=3) and solid (n=3) subtypes. The reads per kilo base of exon per million mapped reads data derived from RNA-sequencing were calculated to analyze the gene expression profiles of the MPCs. The expression levels of the genes were validated by a real-time PCR.
Results:
A hierarchical clustering analysis revealed a cluster of tumor samples with MPCs. Two hundred four genes were differentially expressed in adenocarcinomas that contain an MPC. A gene-ontology analysis showed the enrichment of signal-related genes, with 50 significantly upregulated genes, including BAMBI, CXCL14 and VSIG1.
Conclusion:
The results of a gene expression analysis using next generation sequencing revealed the specific gene expression profile of adenocarcinomas that contain an MPC, and several genes might be candidate diagnostic biomarkers for the subtype. In addition, these genes may play an important role in the unique characteristics of adenocarcinomas that contain an MPC.
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- Abstract
Background:
Pulmonary large cell carcinoma (LCC) was an undifferentiated and marker-null non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) according to 2015 WHO classification criteria. However, there are few studies presented molecular analysis and clinical features of this subtype. The aim of this study is to investigate profile of driver mutations and clinicopathological features of marker-null LCC.
Methods:
From January 2008 to February 2015, 327 cases of surgically resected primary large cell carcinoma diagnosed by H&E staining were enrolled from Shanghai pulmonary hospital affiliated to Tongji university (Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma and large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma were excluded with typical morphologic features). Large cell carcinoma was reclassificated with a panel of immunophenotypic markers (adenocarcinoma [ADC]-specific, thyroid transcription factor-1, napsin A and anti-diastase PAS staining; squamous cell carcinoma [SQCC]-specific, cytokeratin5/6, and p40; epithelial mesenchymal transition [EMT], cytokeratin, vimentin and ZEB1; neuroendocrine differentiation, synaptophysin and CD56). Molecular analysis (EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, ROS1, ALK and PIK3CA) and immunomarker PD-L1 of marker-null LCC were detected by ARMS method and immunohistochemistry, respectively.
Results:
113 cases (113/327, 34.6%)were rediagnosed as ADC with solid growth pattern, which showed TTF-1 positive rate 59.3% (67/113, 59.3%) , Napsin A positive rate 82.3% (93/113,82.3%)( P<0.001)) and positive PAS staining (5/113, 4.4%) . 47 (47/327, 14.4%) cases were reclassificated as SQCC, which positively expressed p40 (44 cases, 44/47, 93.6% ) and CK5/6 (31 cases, 31/47, 66%)( P<0.01). 5 (5/327, 1.5%) cases of large cell neuroendcrine carcinoma showed both neuroendocrine morphological feature and CD56、Syn expression. 26 (26/327, 8.0%) were redefined as sarcomatoid carcinoma expressed cytokeratin, vimentin and ZEB1. 136 (136/327, 41.6%) cases of marker-null LCC were diagnosed for lack of specific markers expression. 30 (30/136, 22.1%) cases of marker-null LCC showed PD-L1 positive. Driver genes alteration were found in 3 cases from 30 cases marker-null LCC, including KRAS (n=1), BRAF (n=1) and PIK3CA (n=1). Clinicopathological characteristics indicated that LCC patients were older and more likely to be male nonsmokers.
Conclusion:
Large cell carcinoma was differentially diagnosed by combining with undifferentiated NSCLC morphology and marker-null features. Driver genes mutation testing may significantly impact on the choice of targeted therapy.
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P1.02-076 - DNA Methylation Profiling Unravels a TGF-β Hyperresponse in Tumor Associated Fibroblasts from Lung Cancer Patients (ID 5356)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R. Ikemori, M. Vizoso, M. Puig, A. Labernardie, M. Gabasa, X. Trepat, N. Reguart, M. Esteller, J. Alcaraz
- Abstract
Background:
Tumor associated fibroblasts (TAFs) are drawing increasing attention as potential therapeutic targets owing to its direct implication in major steps of tumor progression in solid tumors including non-small cell lung cancer. Accordingly, there is growing interest in defining the aberrant molecular differences between normal and TAFs that support tumor progression. For this purpose, we recently conducted a genome-wide DNA methylation profiling of TAFs and paired control fibroblasts (CFs) from non-small cell lung cancer patients, and reported a widespread hypomethylation concomitantly with a focal gain of DNA methylation indicative of a marked epigenetic reprogramming. Of note, the aberrant epigenome of lung TAFs had a global impact in gene expression and a selective impact on the TGF-β pathway, including the hypermethylation of SMAD3, which is an important transcription factor of the TGF-β pathway. However, the functional implications of the aberrant TGF-β pathway in lung TAFs remains undefined.
Methods:
Patient-derived TAFs and paired control fibroblasts from either adenocarcinoma (ADC) or squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) patients were stimulated with TGF-β1 and their responses were examined in terms of activation and contractility. Activation markers included expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) and collagen-I, which were assessed by western-blotting and qRT-PCR, respectively. The contractility of single fibroblasts was assessed by traction force microscopy.
Results:
We found a larger expression of activation markers including α-SMA and collagen-I in TAFs compared to control fibroblasts. Likewise, TGF-β1 elicited a larger contractility in TAFs than in control fibroblasts as assessed by traction force microscopy. Of note, these results were consistent with previous observations reported on skin fibroblasts from Smad3 knock-out mice.
Conclusion:
Our findings reveal that lung TAFs are hyperresponsive to TGF-β1, even though their expression of SMAD3 is epigenetically down-regulated. This aberrant response to TGF-β1 may underlie the expansion and/or maintenance of the tumor-promoting desmoplastic stroma in lung cancer.
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P1.02-077 - Whole-Transcriptome Gene Expression Analysis of Pulmonary Sarcomatoid Carcinomas (ID 5477)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R. Bruno, G. Alì, R. Giannini, A. Proietti, A. Mussi, G. Fontanini
- Abstract
Background:
Pulmonary sarcomatoid carcinomas (PSCs) are rare, poorly differentiated non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) containing sarcoma or sarcoma-like features, with a worse prognosis than other NSCLCs. The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies three histopathologic subtypes: subtype-1 includes pleomorphic, spindle-cell, and giant-cell carcinomas (PSCGC), subtype-2 carcinosarcoma and subtype-3 blastoma. The value of different subtypes for clinical management and their molecular characteristics are unclear. The aim of this study is to get new insights into PSCs carcinogenesis by a high-throughput sequencing of RNA (RNA-seq).
Methods:
A whole-transcriptome targeted-gene quantification analysis was retrospectively performed on RNA from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues of 13 PSCs (5 pleomorphic, 2 spindle-cell, 2 giant-cell carcinomas, 4 carcinosarcomas). RNA-seq reads were mapped to the amplicon sequences of the panel and quantified by tools based on alignment algorithms. Differentially expressed genes between subtype-1and -2 were determined using a non-parametric Mann-Whitney U-test (p-value < 0.01) with linearity correction. Moreover, within subtype-1 we compared gene expression levels between monophasic (spindle- and giant-cell) and biphasic (pleomorphic) carcinomas.
Results:
216 genes resulted down-regulated and 15 up-regulated in PSCGC compared to carcinosarcomas (Table 1). There were not significant differences between monophasic and biphasic PSCGC. Figure 1
Conclusion:
PSCs are heterogeneous tumours, barely characterized from a molecular point of view. WHO has recently classified PSCGC and carcinosarcoma as two distinct entities, and our results demonstrated that they effectively have different gene expression profiles. Deregulated genes mostly belong to pathways crucial for cancer, like p53-, MAPK- and Wnt-signaling, and future investigation should clarify their specific role in PSCs. Interestingly, we did not find statistically deregulated genes among monophasic and biphasic carcinomas of subtype-1, thus indicating their molecular similarity. Although this is a preliminary and explorative study, needing further validation, it constitutes a starting point to increase our knowledge of these rare tumours.
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P1.02-078 - Expression Profiling of LKB1 Pathway in Young and Old Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients (ID 5484)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Boldrini, M. Giordano, A. Servadio, C. Niccoli, M. Lucchi, F. Melfi, A. Mussi, G. Fontanini
- Abstract
Background:
The youthful lung cancer may constitute an entity with distinct clinicopathologic characteristics. The serine/threonine kinase LKB1, also known as Serine/Threonine Kinase 11-STK11, is a known tumor suppressor gene involved in cellular responses such as energy metabolism, cell polarity and cell growth, but the role of LKB1 pathway in lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) is barely studied, especially in young patients
Methods:
Fifty lung ADC patients were retrospectively analysed. After RNA purification from formalin fixed and paraffin embedded tumor tissues, we analysed the mRNA expression levels of LKB1 and of genes involved in its pathway, such as cyclin D1 (CCND1), beta catenin (CCNNB1), lysyl oxidase (LOX), yes-associated protein-1 (YAP-1), and survivin, with NanoString technology, a new tool for a more accurate expression profiling. KRAS mutations were investigated by pyrosequencing analysis. Clinicopathologic characteristics and survival analysis were available for all patients.
Results:
Patients under 50 years old (including 50) were defined as the younger group and patients above 50 years old were defined as the older group. Among all the clinicopathologic characteristics, in the younger group there were more women, less solid and more acinar adenocarcinoma prevalent pattern in comparison to the older group. Younger and older groups showed similar survival rates, as well as KRAS mutations frequencies. Also, in the comparison between the gene expression level of the analyzed genes and the two different age subgroups,no statistical difference was found. We then focused on the LKB1 pathway in all series, independently from the age stratification, founding LKB1 low expression associated with low cyclin D1 (CCND1) (p<0.0001), beta catenin (CCNNB1) (p<0.0001), and YAP1 (p=0.0024) levels, suggesting a target regulation by LKB1. We next tested the expression level of LOX, one of its downstream target, and we found that lung ADC with a high LOX mRNA expression showed a significantly worse prognosis, either in terms of disease-free interval or overall post-operative survival.
Conclusion:
Based on our preliminary results young patients seem to show similar LKB1 pathway expression levels to older group, even if further investigations will be necessary. Moreover, our data suggest LKB1 as a key pathway in lung ADC regardless of age, with a relevant sfavorable role of LOX. A robust assessment of LKB1 and of its downstream gene, LOX in particular, may elucidate the role of this pathway deregulation in lung adenocarcinoma in order to identify potential target for lung cancer therapy.
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P1.02-079 - DNA Ploidy, CPA4 and Rel B Expression in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer: Correlation with Clinicopathologic Parameter (ID 5747)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Hainis, E. Haini, A. Tsipis, M. Gonidi, P. Athanassiadou, A.M. Athanassiadou
- Abstract
Background:
The aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of CPA4 a member of carboxypeptidase family and Rel B a member of nuclear transcription factor Kappa B family in imprints of resected NSCLC and correlate these expressions with DNA ploidy and classical prognostic factors.
Methods:
A total of 45 smears of patients who underwent surgical treatment for NSCLC were examined immunocytochemicaly for the expression of CPA4 and Rel B. Imprint smears also were stained using the Feulgen procedure in order to evaluate DNA ploidy in the same cases.
Results:
Thirty two (71,1%) of the tumors were classified as aneuploid. CPA4 positive expression was observed in 18 (40%) and Rel B in 21 (46,7%) of the tumors. We found a significant relationship between DNA ploidy and grade (p=0,005). CPA4 and Rel B expression correlated with grade (p<0,0001 for both) and also with nodal status (p=0,004 and p=0,017, respectively). Cox regression multivariable analysis demonstrated that CPA4 and Rel B expression were independent prognostic factors. The mean DNA index was higher for tumors with negative expression of CPA4 and Rel B (P=0,045 and p=0,025 respectively)
Conclusion:
DNA aneuploidy correlates with poor and moderately differentiated tumors. CPA4 and Rel B positive expression is in relation to well differentiated carcinomas and nodal status
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P1.02-080 - Genomic Relationship between Lung Adenocarcinoma and Synchronous AIS/AAH Lesions in the Same Lobe (ID 5776)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L.J. Tafe, F. De Abreu, J. Peterson, D. Finley, C. Black
- Abstract
Background:
Atypical adenomatous hyperplasia (AAH) is considered the precursor lesion of adenocarcinoma (ADC), and adenocarcinoma in-situ (AIS) the pre-invasive phase of invasive ADC. Finding incidental synchronous AIS/AAH within lung resection specimens of ADC is an opportunity to evaluate and compare the genomic profiles of the lesions. Different mutation profiles would suggest a field effect with the formation of an early second primary. Identical mutations might suggest a closer relationship with the primary tumor such as an early intrapulmonary metastasis from spread through air spaces. In this study we evaluate the genomic profiles of synchronous AIS/AAH lesions and separate primary ADC in the same lobe of resection specimens.
Methods:
We tested the 13 lesions from six patients identified between August 2015 and June 2016 by targeted next generation sequencing (NGS) using the 50 gene AmpliSeq Cancer Hotspot Panel v2 and FISH for ALK rearrangements. All of our patients had a single radiographically evident ADC and one patient had a second smaller lesion which was proven ADC at resection. All six patients had at least one additional incidental focus of AIS/AAH, not detected radiographically. Our patients ranged in age from 51-67. Five patients were female (83%) and all were current or former smokers.
Results:
All cases were successfully tested and somatic alterations were found in all ADC and three AAH/AIS lesions. None of the samples had an ALK rearrangement. Patient 3, with two ADC, had different profiles between all three lesions tested. In Patient 6, the ADC had an activating EGFR p.L858R mutation and the synchronous AAH lesion showed a KRAS p.G12D mutation.Results
RUL – right upper lobe; LUL/LLL – left upper/lower lobe; WT – wild-typePatient ADC site ADC molecular AIS/AAH site AIS/AAH molecular 1 RUL, ADC STK11 p.E342Q RUL, AAH WT 2 LUL, ADC TP53 p.R158L LUL, AIS WT 3 LLL, ADC1 LLL, ADC2 KRAS p.G12V KRAS G12V; PIK3CA p.H1047L LLL, AIS TP53 p.H168Q; TP53 p.S94fs 4 LUL, ADC TP53 p.V157F LUL, AIS ATM p.F858L 5 RUL, ADC KRAS p.G12A; FLT3 p.Y599H RUL, AIS WT 6 LLL, ADC EGFR p.L858R LLL, AAH KRAS p.G12D
Conclusion:
All of the synchronous lesions, including the AAH/AIS lesions, showed different genomic profiles supporting the concept of field cancerization, suggesting that these incidental AAH/AIS foci likely represent de novo secondary tumors.
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P1.02-081 - The Relationship of CDH3 Expression and DNA Methylation in Thymic Epitherial Tumors (ID 5929)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Kajiura, K. Kondo, T. Sawada, N. Kawakita, M. Tsuboi, H. Takizawa, A. Tangoku
- Abstract
Background:
The genome wide sequence and microarray has performed flourishingly for major cancer specimen in recent day. However, thymic epithelial tumor(TET) was rare tumor comparatively, there are few reports about epigenetic alternation in TET. Cadherin-3, also known as P-cadherin, is a protein encoded by the CDH3 gene. This study was aimed at identifying the relationship DNA methylation and gene expression of CDH3 gene in TET, especially B3 thymoma and thymic cancer.
Methods:
A)DNA methylation 1) DNA were extracted fresh frozen samples of B3 thymoma and thymic cancer, diagnosed as squamous cell carcinoma. These samples collected from the patients, diagnosed as TET, underwent surgery at Tokushima university from 1990 to 2016. 2) DNA was treated by bisulfite conversion. 3) DNA methylation level was measured by infinium methylation assay(Human Methylation 450K DNA Analysis Kit ; Illumina) exhaustively. 7 cases of thymic cancer and 8 cases of B3 thymoma applied this assay. 4) The methylation levels of CpG sites were calculated as β-values (β = Intensity (methylated)/intensity (methylated + unmethylated) by applying default settings of the GenomeStudio Software's DNA methylation module (Illumina). Analysis of this methylation assay used by R package. B) Immunostaining Immunostaining was performed Envision method. It was used Anti-pan-Cadherin antibody (ab16505), dilution 1300 times as first antibody. DAKO Chemomate EnVsion kit was used as second antibody.
Results:
CDH3 had 2 CpG islands. 450K methylation assay set 5 CpG sites on first CpG island as promoter region. (CpG sites:B3 thymoma averageβ-values : thymic cancer averageβ-values : p-value by t-test)=(cg0900242 : 0.07±0.08 : 0.45±0.05 : 2.7×10[-7]), (cg07061260 : 0.21±0.21 : 0.55±0.09 : 3.3×10[-3]), (cg00748373 : 0.19±0.20 : 0.45±0.07 : 0.01), (cg06575065 : 0.28±0.18 : 0.50±0.07 : 0.02), (cg27417609 : 0.35±0.21 : 0.59±0.09 : 0.02). Immunostaining specimen were classified by scoring system measured by stain intensity and stain expanding. It was classified 2points;strong, 1point;weak, 0point;none, in stain intensity. It was classified 3points;diffuse(>80%), 2point;moderate(50-80%), 1point;focal(20-50%), 0point;none(<20%) in stain stain expanding. Expression rate(stain intensity point and stain expanding point) defined more than 4point as expression promotion. Expression promotion rate is 0% in B3 thymoma and 75% in thymic cancer.
Conclusion:
DNA methylation of CDH3 was increasing and P-cadherin protein expression was increasing in thymic cancer compared to B3 thymoma.
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P1.02-082 - The Feasibility of Cell-Free DNA Sequencing for Mutation Detection in Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Was Detemined by Tumor Volume (ID 6001)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Ohira, K. Sakai, S. Maehara, J. Maeda, K. Yoshida, M. Hagiwara, M. Kakihana, T. Okano, N. Kajiwara, K. Nishio, N. Ikeda
- Abstract
Background:
Targeted therapeutics such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) have recently been introduced into clinical practice for individuals with NSCLC positive for actionable mutations of EGFR or ALK fusions, respectively. Molecular profiling that is able to predict the response to such drugs has thus become an important therapeutic strategy, allowing selection of the most appropriate treatment for individual patients.
Methods:
Matched lung cancer tissue and serum specimens were collected from 150 patients who underwent surgery at Tokyo Medical University Hospital from January 2013 to July 2014. All tissue samples were stored at –80°C until analysis. Tumor DNA and cfDNA samples were subjected to analysis with next-generation sequencing (NGS) panels for mutation detection.
Results:
All tumor DNA samples were successfully sequenced with the Ion Proton platform. The median read number per amplicon was 15,632. We identified TP53 mutations in 58 cases (38.7%); EGFR mutations in 56 (37.3%); KRAS mutations in 15 (10.0%); CTNNB1 mutations in 7 (4.7%); ERBB2, PIK3CA, BRAF, and PTEN mutations in 3 each (2.0%); and ERBB4, MET, ALK, FGFR2, NRAS, AKT1, and FBXW7 mutations in 1 each (0.7%). No mutation was detected in 22.0% (33/150) of the samples. Serum cfDNA was extracted for all 150 patients, with a median yield (copy number) of 4936 (range, 572 to 373,658). A total of 149 of the 150 (99.3%) cfDNA samples were successfully sequenced with the Ion Proton platform, with sequencing failure being due to an insufficient read number per amplicon in the one unsuccessful case. The median read number per amplicon for the 149 successfully sequenced cfDNA samples was 33,982.
Conclusion:
These results suggested that detection of mutations in cfDNA of patients with disease at stage IA or IB or at T2a or lower is difficult, and that the feasibility of mutation detection with cfDNA may depend on the T factor rather than the N factor. Tumor volume in the cfDNA mutation–positive group was significantly greater than that in the cfDNA mutation–negative group (159.1 ± 58.0 versus 52.5 ± 9.9 cm[3], p = 0.014). The maximum tumor diameter calculated at diagnosis was also larger in the cfDNA mutation–positive group than in the cfDNA mutation–negative group (5.3 ± 0.7 versus 4.1 ± 0.3 cm, p = 0.050). These results suggested that tumor volume is a determining factor for the feasibility of mutation detection with cfDNA.
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P1.02-083 - Gene Fusion Profile in Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients in Brazil (ID 6071)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T.C. Montella, G.T. Torrezan, M.G. Zalis, M. Reis, C.G. Ferreira
- Abstract
Background:
The detection of driver mutations and targeted therapy have transformed the landscape of treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In addition to EGFR mutation oncogene fusions such as ALK, RET, ROS and others have been identified as targetable genetic aberrations in NSCLC. Access to personalized therapy could be increased with the help of multiplex diagnosis platforms able to detect multiple druggable gene fusions simultaneously. In this study, using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), we describe the prevalence of oncogene fusions in a Brazilian cohort.
Methods:
We included consecutive adenocarcinoma patients referred to a private reference center in Brazil from November-2015 to June-2016. DNA and RNA were extracted from paraffin-embedded tissue from core biopsy or fine needle aspiration specimens. Next generation sequencing was performed for target regions using the Oncomine® Focus Assay on an Ion PGM platform. This panel evaluates 132 hotspot sites of driver mutations in 35 genes, gene copy number variations in 19 genes and 23 gene fusions.
Results:
So far 115-lung adenocarcinoma have been included. Genetic alterations were detected in 72 % (82 of 115) of all patients. The most common genetic alteration detected in this study were KRAS (22%) and EGFR mutations (20%). Oncogene fusions were detected in 13% (15 of 115) of patients. ALK were the most common fusion (7%) followed by RET (3%) and ROS (3%). Of note a FGFR2 fusion detected in a adenocarcinoma patient at odds with previous reports limiting this type of fusion to squamous histology. In contrast no other protein kinase fusions, such as NTRK1, AXL-MBIP and SCAF-PDGFRA were detected in this initial cohort.d.
Conclusion:
In a representative Brazilian cohort, the percentage of ALK, RET and ROS fusions detected matches data published elsewhere. An extended cohort will be presented during the meeting and will allow a better description of rarer fusions.
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P1.02-084 - Polo-Like Kinase 1 (PLK1) Inhibition Decreases Mutational Activity in Bronchial Epithelial Cells Exposed to Tobacco Carcinogens (ID 6206)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D.T. Merrick, E.J. Donald, J.M. Malloy, D. Astling, W.A. Franklin, D.L. Aisner, K. Crooks, M. Seager, J. Haney, R.L. Keith, L. Dwyer-Nield, M. Tennis, K.L. Jones
- Abstract
Background:
Persistence of bronchial dysplasia (BD) is associated with increased risk for the development of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the lung. A comparison of persistent and regressive BD demonstrated that alterations in gene expression can distinguish these types of lesions. Using the genes that differentiate persistent and regressive BD we have identified PLK1 as a key mediator of persistence and have hypothesized that the role it plays in abrogating G2-M cell cycle arrest in the presence of mutational alterations may be central to progression of premalignant airway lesions to invasive SCC.
Methods:
Cultures of the bronchial epithelium derived BEAS-2B (B2B) cell line were exposed to airway mutagens (cigarette smoke condensate [CSC, Kentucky Reference Cigarette 3R4F] or Benzo[A]pyrene, [BaP]) alone or in the presence of 100 nM PLK1 inhibitor Volasertib. Following treatment, clones were selected by ring isolation and DNA was collected to assess mutational events as compared to untreated controls using the TruSightOne targeted next generation sequencing panel (12 megabase coverage, >4800 genes, Illumina, San Diego, CA). Modal distribution of mutation frequencies indicated that ring clones were composed of between 1 - 3 distinct clones. Mutation rates were calculated using these adjusted clone counts for standardization.
Results:
Using the untreated B2B cultures as reference sequence, CSC or BaP alone induced mean incidences of mutations of 15.7 and 60.9 per clone, respectively, although the induction of fewer mutations by CSC made accurate estimates of clonal numbers more difficult. B2B cultures treated with the same concentration and duration of mutagen in the presence of Volasertib showed mean mutational incidences of 13 and 17 per clone, respectively. The ratio of mutation rate for the CSC and BaP treated groups with versus without Volasertib were 0.83 and 0.28, respectively. All mutations detected were single nucleotide variants and characteristic patterns of base changes were noted between mutagen groups with C>A and G>T transversions being more prominent in BaP treated cultures. Ongoing analyses using whole genome sequencing will allow for more accurate enumeration of clones represented and a richer assessment of mutation rates including rearrangements and copy number variants in mutagen treated cells in the presence and absence of PLK1 inhibition.
Conclusion:
Preliminary analyses of bronchial epithelial cell cultures treated with mutagens show reduction of BaP induced mutations in the presence of PLK1 inhibition. The results suggest PLK1 overexpression in BD may promote genomic instability.
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P1.02-085 - Molecular Profile in NSCLC Biopsy Samples: A Multicenter Local Study (ID 6213)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N. Pilnik, V. Bengio, M. Canigiani, M. Ibero, P. Diaz
- Abstract
Background:
During the last time substantial progress have been made in the characterization of the molecular abnormalities of NSCLC tumors such as activations of oncogenes by mutations, translocations and amplifications, which are being used as molecular targets and predictive biomarkers. Currently these molecular analysis is mandatory for therapy selection.
Methods:
92 small biopsies and resection specimens of patients with NSCLC (AC) in different institutions of Cordoba were studied during a period (2014 2016). We determined the frequency of molecular alterations in EGFR and gene fusion ALK in our Caucasian and Hispanic populations to decide the adequate treatment . Histopathology Type,immunohistochemistry (IHC) characteristics as well as molecular profile and several clinical variables were studied. To detect alterations of EGFR and fusion gene EML4-ALK expression, different tests were used with the aim to identify our own profile and decide the adequate therapeutical option. EGFR mutation was studied by therascreen kit, PCR, in order to detect genetic alterations in exons 18, 19, 20 and 21. ALK translocations were analyzed by FISH (Vysis- Break Apart, Abbott) and IHC (clon D5F3, ventana, Roche). The molecular profiles were correlated with different clinical variables (age, gender, and tobacco habits). The statistical method used was the multiple regression logistic model.
Results:
58 men and 34 women out of 92 samples were tested for EGFR expression. Eight men and ten women expressed EGFR positive. Sixteen men and two women were smokers. Activating kinase-domain mutations in EGFR were identified in 21 pts (22,82 %): exon 19 deletion = 11, L858R = 7, exon 20 insertion = 1, other = 2. EGFR alterations were related with gender , women showed more alterations of the genes. Age and smoking habit of patients did not show significant association . We used the multiple regression logistic model to correlate EGFR expression to age, gender, tobacco habits. We identified 4 pts (5%) with fusion gene EML4-ALK. ALK alterations were not related to gender, age and smoking habit .
Conclusion:
Our results showed a comparable frequency in EGFR mutations and gene fusion ALK in relation to the data published in western population and our data presented in LALCA meeting 2016. These results permit an adequate diagnosis to provide these pts with the most benefitial therapy.
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P1.02-086 - ATM Mutations in Lung Cancer Correlate to Higher Mutation Rates (ID 6339)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L.F. Petersen, D..G. Bebb
- Abstract
Background:
Ataxia telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) is a critical first responder to DNA damage in the cell, but despite being one of the most mutated genes in lung cancer, no specific mutation hotspots have been linked with disease development. Our own quantitative analysis of ATM protein levels in patient samples suggests that ATM is lost in 20-25% of cases and that this loss correlates with poor overall survival and increased response to adjuvant chemotherapy treatments. We believe that this may be the result of increased genomic instability within the cancer cells caused by a lack of adequate DNA repair. Given that ATM-deficient cancers may have higher genetic instability, and that ATM is so highly mutated in lung cancer, we sought to quantify the relationship between ATM mutations and genomic instability, as measured by total somatic mutations.
Methods:
Using genomic and sequencing data available from the Broad Institute Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE) and the NIH Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we correlated mutations in ATM and other genes involved with the DNA damage response with the total number of mutations annotated in ~900 cancer cell lines and ~500 lung adenocarcinomas.
Results:
We show that in cell lines across all cancer types, and particularly in lung, breast, and esophageal cancers, mutations in ATM correlate with a significantly higher number of total mutations. Only mutations in the direct damage response genes appeared to associate with total mutations, whereas p53 – while more commonly mutated – did not correlate with higher mutations in cell lines or patients. In lung cancer patients, ATM mutations were similarly correlated with high somatic mutations.
Conclusion:
We have identified a potential relationship between ATM mutation and total somatic mutations in cancer cell line and patient tumour genomes, which may be indicative of overall genetic instability. Analysis of the ATM mutations in cell lines and patient samples clearly shows that there are no specific hotspots for mutation in ATM that correlate with increased total mutations. Thus screening for ATM mutations alone may not be sufficient to indicate loss of function or instability. However, this data may prove useful in developing panels of targets to screen as mutation hotspots of instability, and ultimately to help identify patients that may benefit from targeted or modified therapy options based on ATM-deficiency or higher genetic instability.
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P1.02-087 - Sensitive Detection of Rare Cancer Cells by Preprogrp-Specific RT-PCR and Its Correlation with Clinicopathological Data and Survival (ID 3802)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F.M.A. Abou Elkasem, N.F. Shafik, A.F. Shafik, M. Rahoma, M.S.E. Arafa
- Abstract
Background:
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) based amplification of transcripts expressed in cancer but not in normal non-neoplastic cells is increasingly used for the sensitive detection of rare disseminated or exfoliated cancer cells to improve cancer staging and early detection protocols. This study aimed to detection of Prepro–Gastrin-Releasing Peptide in peripheral blood in lung cancer patients referred to National Cancer Institute, Cairo University, Egypt. And to identify its relationship with clinicopathological features, prognosis and survival.
Methods:
Our study group consisted of 62 newly diagnosed lung cancer cases and 30 healthy volunteers, RNA was isolated from peripheral blood and then the samples were assayed by nested RT- PCR. Pearson's chi (X2) test was used to compare categorical variables. Kaplan Meier curves for survival analysis and Median and range for continuous variables were used for statistical analysis.
Results:
Our study included 62 cases of lung cancer (60 males, median age was 57(34-81) years. For clinicodemographic data( Fig.1). Eleven (17%) cases had pleural effusion (stage IV). Seventeen (27%) cases had extensive SCLC, 7 cases had limited SCLC. Fourty-four (70%) cases received chemotherapy, 20 (32%) cases received palliative radiotherapy to bone, brain or mediastinum. Seventeen (27%) had elevated alkaline phosphatase level. Seven (63%) out of the 11 cases with bone metastasis underwent splintage, internal fixation ± bone cement injection to reinforce a bone defect prior to palliative radiotherapy (pRTH). As regard SCLC, 10 (16%) cases received platinum based chemotherapy. One case developed GIII mucositis and one case developed jaundice and PS became III and shifted to best supportive treatment. One case received gamma knife to cerebellar metastasis, one case received palliative RTH to mediastinum and another pRTH to brain before chemotherapy. Twenty-six (41.9%) cases were preprogastrin +ve(53.8% SCLC, 15.4% Squamous cell ca, 15.4%large cell ca, 11.5% adenocarcinoma and 3.8% undifferentiated carcinoma) . Median PFS=3.9 months (2.87-4.96). Median PFS among preprogastrin –ve vs. +ve cases was 4 vs. 3 months. There was a statistical significant relationship between preprogastrin and SCLC with higher number of SCLC among +ve preprogastrin cases (P=0.038). Also, there was a statistical significant relationship between preprogastrin and smoking with many smokers among +ve preprogastrin cases (P=0.010).
Conclusion:
SCLC and smoking are significantly correlated with preprogastrin. Median PFS was longer in preprogastrin -ve cases. So detection of circulating tumor cells might be a suitable parameter to identify patients who might benefit from adjuvant therapy. Smoking cessation is mandatory.
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P1.03 - Poster Session with Presenters Present (ID 455)
- Type: Poster Presenters Present
- Track: Radiology/Staging/Screening
- Presentations: 84
- Moderators:
- Coordinates: 12/05/2016, 14:30 - 15:45, Hall B (Poster Area)
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P1.03-001 - The Utility of Liquid-Biopsy for Detecting EGFR Mutation in Clinical Practice: 169 Cases in a Single Institution Research Study (ID 6321)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Ito, O. Hataji, Y. Suzuki, H. Saiki, T. Sakaguchi, K. Hayashi, Y. Nishii, F. Watanabe, T. Kobayashi, E.C. Gabazza, O. Taguchi
- Abstract
Background:
EGFR-TKIs have promising anti-tumor activities for EGFR-mutant NSCLC, however, almost all patients invariably experience progression on EGFR-TKI therapy. The T790M mutation is known as a major mechanism of resistance to EGFR-TKIs, and re-biopsy is essential for detecting the T790M mutation in EGFR-TKI failure patients. We conducted both tissue-biopsy and liquid-biopsy for all patients who were diagnosed with NSCLC in our institution, and we retrospectively evaluated the utility of liquid-biopsy in clinical practice.
Methods:
We reviewed all patients who were diagnosed with or suspected of having NSCLC and received a liquid-biopsy between April 2015 and June 2016 in Matsusaka Municipal Hospital. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical benefit of liquid-biopsy by comparing of the results of the liquid-biopsies against the results of the tissue-biopsies. The proportions were compared using Chi-square statistics, or the Fisher’s exact test where appropriate.
Results:
A total of 169 patients who received liquid-biopsy for the purpose of detecting an EGFR mutation were enrolled in this assessment. The median patient age was 74 (range 37-95); 104 patients were male, 66 patients were never-smokers, 102 patients(58.3%) had been pathologically diagnosed with adenocarcinoma; 14 patients(8.3%) were both liquid-positive and tissue-positive for an EGFR mutation, 32 patients(18.9%) displayed a discrepancy, having a liquid-negative and a tissue-positive result, although no patients were liquid-positive and tissue-negative.(sensitivity, 33.3%; specificity, 100%) There were 20 patients who had an EGFR mutation detected by liquid-biopsy, and all patients with a liquid-positive result were either clinical stage 3B, 4, or in recurrence. There was a significant difference in the proportion of stage 3B, 4, and recurrent patients between liquid-positive and liquid-negative patients among EGFR mutated patients. (p<0.0001) Of all patients, 19 patients with a liquid-positive result, and 4 patients with a tissue-positive result alone, experienced EGFR-TKI therapy. There was no significant difference in the response rate to EGFR-TKIs between the liquid-positive and liquid-negative patients among EGFR mutated patients. (61.1% vs. 66.6%, p=0.684)
Conclusion:
This study demonstrated that liquid-biopsy indicates high specificity, and is available for detecting EGFR mutation in clinical practice. In addition, our institutional experience indicated that liquid-biopsy could be beneficial especially for patients who are unable to receive a tissue biopsy procedure for any reason. Although some patients had a discrepancy between the results of the liquid biopsy and the tissue-biopsy, advanced EGFR mutated NSCLC was highly detectable by liquid-biopsy. Further investigation is warranted to confirm the clinical benefit of liquid-biopsy.
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P1.03-002 - Can We Discriminate between Different Subtypes of Non-Small Cell Cancer Patients Based on Plasma Metabolic Fingerprint? (ID 4598)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Ciborowski, K. Pietrowska, J. Kisluk, P. Samczuk, M. Kozlowski, J. Niklinski, A. Kretowski
- Abstract
Background:
Progress in understanding the pathogenesis of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) led to the development of molecularly targeted agents, including those targeting selected growth factors: vascular endothelial (VEGF), platelet-derived (PDGF), epidermal (EGF), insulin-like I (IGF-I), and anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) signaling. Interestingly, clinical trials of targeted agents and newer chemotherapy agents yielded differences in outcomes according to histologic subgroups providing a rationale for histology-based treatment approaches. Consequently, a correct histologic diagnosis is becoming increasingly important. However, even the most careful examination of biopsies by expert pulmonary pathologists leave about 10-30% of NSCLC as not specified. Metabolomics is widely used for biomarkers discovery and patients stratification. This novel tool may provide additional diagnostic markers, which could support proper NSCLC subtyping. In the present study plasma samples obtained from patients with the major NSCLC histologic subtypes and controls were fingerprinted by liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method.
Methods:
The study was performed on the group of 63 NSCLC patients and 32 controls. Based on the histology evidence the patients were classified as ADC (n=20), LCC (n=13), and SCC (n=30). Individuals in all studied groups were matched in age (62±10 years), sex (15-38%F) and BMI (26±3). Metabolites extracted from plasma were analyzed by use of LC-QTOF-MS in positive and negative ion modes. Metabolic features repetitively measured in QC samples (RSD<20%) and present in at least 90% of the samples were forwarded to statistical analysis. Depending on data distribution t-test or U-test were used to select metabolites significantly different between controls and NSCLC patients. ANOVA was used to select metabolites discriminating between NSCLC subtypes. Multivariate analysis was used to show subtype-related patients’ classification.
Results:
Identification of plasma metabolites significantly different between controls and NSCLC showed differences in phospholipids (e.g. PC 34:3, +53% in NSCLC, p=0.01; PC 36:4, +50% in NSCLC, p=0.001; Lyso PC 18:3, +37% in NSCLC, p=0.02; PE 34:2, +36% in NSCLC, p=0.0002) and docosahexaenoic fatty acid (-34% in NSCLC, p=0.02). Based on metabolites significant after ANOVA analysis it was possible to build good quality (R[2]=0.652, Q[2]=0.408) partial least square discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) model separating NSCLC subtypes. Among metabolites responsible for this separation sphinganine (p=0.009), anandamide (p=0.009), malonyl carnitine (p=0.001), and Lyso PE 20:5 (p=0.02) can be mentioned.
Conclusion:
Metabolic fingerprinting of plasma samples allowed for selection a panel of metabolites able to discriminate between NSCLC subtypes. Although promising, obtained results require further validation with target methods and on larger cohort of patients. Acknowledgements: The study was funded by National Science Centre, Poland (2014/13/B/NZ5/01256).
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P1.03-003 - The Warburg Effect: Persistence of Stem Cell Metabolism in Lung Cancer as Failure of Differentiation (ID 4378)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R.J. Downey, M. Riester, H. Wu, J. Zheng, F. Michor
- Abstract
Background:
Two recent observations are relevant to explaining Warburg's observation the cancers constitutively utilize glycolysis in the presence of oxygen sufficient for oxidative phosphorylation. First, the metabolism of stem cells has been shown to be constitutive (‘aerobic’) glycolysis, with differentiation involving a transition to oxidative phosphorylation. Second, the degree of glucose uptake by a cancer has been associated with histologic differentiation. We hypothesized that the high levels of glucose uptake observed in poorly differentiated lung cancers may reflect persistence in cancers of the glycolytic metabolism of stem cells that fail to fully differentiate.
Methods:
Tumor glucose uptake was measured by FDG-PET in 859 patients with histologically diverse cancers including NSCLC. We used normal mixture modeling to explore SUV distributions and tested for association between glucose uptake and histological differentiation, risk of lymph node metastasis, and survival. Using microarray data, we performed pathway and transcription factor analyses to compare tumors with high/low glucose uptake.
Results:
Well-differentiated NSCLC had low FDG uptake, and moderately/poorly differentiated tumors higher uptake. The distribution of FDG-PET uptake was modal with a low peak at SUV 2-4 and a high peak at SUV 8-11. Figure 1 The cancers in the two peaks were clinically distinct in terms of the risk of nodal metastases and of death. Carbohydrate metabolism-related and pentose/nucleotide synthesis-related genes were elevated in the high SUV clusters, Krebs cycle/glutamine metabolism-related genes were elevated in the low SUV mode samples. Expression of Myc target genes was associated with SUV mode, but Nanog, Sox2, Oct4 and PRC2 where not.
Conclusion:
The biological basis for the Warburg effect is persistence of stem cell metabolism in lung cancers as a failure to transition from glycolysis-utilizing undifferentiated cells to oxidative phosphorylation-utilizing differentiated cells. Lung cancers cluster along the differentiation pathway into two groups. Our results have implications for determining prognosis, cancer screening and surveillance after resection.
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P1.03-004 - Percutaneous Lung Biopsy for Genomic Assessment: Comparison between Two Different next Generation Sequencing Platforms (ID 6291)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L.M. Frota Lima, S.H. Sabir
- Abstract
Background:
Purpose: Compare the successful use of percutaneous lung biopsy for two different next generation sequencing (NGS) platforms.
Methods:
Retrospective review of 232 consecutive lung cancer patients who underwent a histologically diagnostic image guided lung biopsy for NGS between 4/2013 and 12/2014 with samples sent for NGS. Procedures were performed using 19 gauge coaxial guide needles, 20 gauge side-cutting core needles and 22 gauge Chiba FNA needles. If a request for analysis of 2 or more gene mutations was received, samples were evaluated for NGS. A minimum sample tumor cellularity of 20% on pathology review was required to send for NGS. Next DNA was extracted from the samples and amount of DNA was assessed. Sequencing was performed with a 46-gene or 50-gene multiplex platform (Iron Torrent Personal Genome Machine). Patient demographics, lesion imaging, procedural technique and NGS success were collected. Descriptive statistics were tabulated. Two tailed Fisher’s exact test was calculated to compare success rate of the two NGS platforms.
Results:
The average age of the patients was 66 years (34 – 91). 59.05% were female, 65.52% had history of smoking, 89.22% of the tumors biopsied were primary lung cancer and 10.78% were lung metastasis from lung cancer. Average lesion size was 4.07 cm (0.8 – 15.6). 84.91% of the lesions were spiculated, 78% were solid and 4.74% had calcification. 20.69% of the patients had pleural effusion, 65.08% had known metastasis and 20.25% had systemic treatment within three months prior to the procedure. Average lesion distance from the pleura was 1.87 cm (0 to 8.5 cm). 48.70% of the biopsies had local hemorrhage during the procedure, 18.10% developed pneumothorax and 5.17% needed a chest tube. 44 biopsies were collected for NGS with 46-gene multiplex platform (CMS-46) and 188 for 50-gene (CMS-50) assessment. The success rate was 59.09% for CMS-46 and 80.85% for CMS-50 (p=0.0048).
Conclusion:
There is a significant difference in the successful use of percutaneous lung biopsy with two different NGS platforms.
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P1.03-005 - High Resolution Metabolomics in Discovering Plasma Biomarkers of Lung Cancer Patients with EGFR Common Mutations (Exon 19 or 21) (ID 4978)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.Y. Lee, K.H. Kang, A.D. Pamungkas, Y. Park
- Abstract
Background:
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a key target in the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The presence of EGFR mutations predicts the sensitivity to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) of NSCLC patients. For this reason, EGFR mutation test is required to provide personalized treatment options. Currently available DNA sources are mainly small biopsies and cytological samples, providing limited and low-quality material. So, there is the need of new biomarker discovery. Recently, metabolomics, which is the comprehensive study of low molecular weight metabolites, has also been developed. Integration of transcriptomic and metabolomic data has enabled deeper analysis of chemosensitive pathways. In this regard, this study aims to apply high resolution metabolomics (HRM) to detect significant compounds that might contribute in inducing EGFR mutations.
Methods:
Plasma samples from 2 healthy volunteers and 15 lung cancer patients were analyzed to detect biomarkers which can predict EGFR mutations. The comparison was made between healthy control and lung cancer groups for metabolic differences. Ten patients had EGFR mutations and five patients had wild type EGFR (n=5) in tumor tissue. The EGFR mutation group was divided into exon 21 deletion group (n=6), and exon 19 deletion group (n=4). Differences in metabolic profiles of EGFR mutation lung cancer populations and EGFR wild type lung cancer patients were examined. Metabolites were separated using Agilent 1200 High Performance Liquid Chromatography and Agilent 6530 quadrupole time-of-flight LC/MS.
Results:
From 216 metabolites, 112 metabolites were found to be significantly different. Relative concentration of L-valine, linoleate, tetradecanoyl carnitine, 5-MTHF, and N-succinyl-L-Glutamate-5 semialdehyde showed significant difference (p<0.05). Linoleic acid was elevated in mutation group while tetradecanoyl carnitine was found to be lowered in mutation group. These two compounds are related to the alteration of mitochondrial energy metabolism (carnitine shuttle). Compounds related to amino acid metabolism, L-valine and N-succinyl-L-Glutamate-5 semi aldehyde were increased in mutation group.
Conclusion:
Our results show that HRM with the combination of pathway analysis from significant metabolites was able to discriminate an EGFR mutation positive patients (exon 19 or exon 21) from wild type advanced NSCLC patients. Therefore, high resolution metabolomics can be the potential non-invasive tool to utilize clinically to detect the EGFR mutations in NSCLC patients.
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P1.03-006 - Quantification of PD-L1 Expression on Tumor Cells in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Using Non-Enzymatic Tissue Dissociation and Flow Cytometry (ID 5095)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Chargin, R. Morgan, U. Sundram, N. Ratti, R. Rodriguez, K. Shults, B.K. Patterson
- Abstract
Background:
Tumors use many mechanisms to evade the immune system, often manipulating pathways to evade cell death. The PD-L1/PD-1 pathway in particular, has become a promising target for immuno-oncology drug development. PD-L1/PD-1 therapy has been shown to be effective in patients with NSCLC, regardless of their PD-L1 expression profile by immunohistochemistry. This creates a challenge in determining potential responders from non-responders prior to treatment. The objective of this study was to develop a trulyquantitative technology for PD-L1 expression in NSCLC. In addition, we also present a non-enzymatic technology that creates a tumor cell suspension from fresh tumor tissue so that either FNA or fresh tissue can be used.
Methods:
4 mm punches were taken from each tumor. Non-enzymatic tissue homogenization (IncellPREP; IncellDx, CA) was performed. Cells were labeled with antibodies directed against CD45 and PD-L1, fixed and permeabilized then stained with DAPI to identify intact, single cells, and to analyze cell cycle.
Results:
We compared PD-L1 expression by flow cytometry using a 1% cut-off for positivity in the tumor cell population and a 1% cut-off of cells with at least 1+ intensity in immunohistochemically stained tissue sections as positive (Table 1). As demonstrated in the table, 10 of 12 lung tumor samples were concordant while 2 were discordant, one positive by flow and negative by IHC and one negative by flow and positive by IHC. PD-L1 expression by flow cytometry varied widely (1.2% to 89.4%) even in the positive concordant cases. In addition, PD-L1 expression in the aneuploid tumor population did not necessarily agree with the expression in the diploid tumor population. Figure 1
Conclusion:
Fine, unequivocal, quantification of PD-L1 on tumor and immune cells in NSCLC may allow for better prediction of response to therapies. The present study also offers a technology that can create a universal sample type from either FNA or fresh tissue.
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P1.03-007 - Improvement in Performance of an Autoantibody Panel Test for Detection of Lung Cancer by Addition of a Single Novel Biomarker (EDB1) (ID 5039)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C. Chapman, J. McElveen, J. Allen, S. Gilbert, J. Jett, P. Mazzone, A. Murray
- Abstract
Background:
In order to provide optimal cost-benefit, the US national lung cancer screening program is restricted to a relatively narrow group of high risk individuals, with 70% of patients with lung cancer falling outside the CT screening inclusion criteria. Additional tests that can identify those at increased risk who do not qualify for CT screening may be useful. A biomarker assay that measures a panel of autoantibodies and is intended to be used as an aid to early detection of lung cancer is commercially available. It has high specificity but moderate sensitivity. The aim of this study was to investigate the performance of an additional biomarker that may increase the sensitivity of the autoantibody test in order to improve its clinical utility.
Methods:
All lung cancer cases were individually matched to controls by age, gender and smoking history. Discovery screening of a panel of 39 potential protein biomarkers was performed on a multiplex Luminex system using a cohort of 44 lung cancers and 44 controls. Validation studies were performed on 334 lung cancers and 326 controls plus 140 samples from patients with autoimmune disease obtained from Oncimmune biobanks as well as 197 cases and 301 controls obtained from the Cleveland Clinic using a singleplex microtiter plate ELISA (Biotechne). The autoantibody test was performed by Oncimmune Ltd.
Results:
The discovery screen identified one protein biomarker (EDB1) that demonstrated clear cancer/normal differentiation and high specificity in both control groups (risk matched and inflammatory/autoimmune disease). The validation studies provided the performance data in the table. The specificity of EDB1 in patients with benign autoimmune disease was 97.8%.Cohort Biomarker Test Sesitivity Specificity PPV Oncimmune biobank Autoantibody test 31.0% 86.2% 7.3% EDB1 35.0% 92.6% 14.3% Autoantibody test + EDB1 56.4% 79.8% 8.9% Cleveland clinic Autoantibody test 37.1% 87.4% 9.4% EDB1 19.3% 83.7% 12.0% Autoantibody test + EDB1 46.7% 83.7% 9.2%
Conclusion:
Running a single biomarker (EDB1) in combination with the autoantibody test improves the sensitivity for detection of lung cancer by between 10 and 25% with minimal adverse effect on specificity so maintaining the PPV of the test.
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P1.03-008 - Clinical Importance of Indolent Lung Cancers (ID 4076)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Hillerdal, H. Koyi
- Abstract
Background:
The occurrence and importance of “indolent” lung cancers is intensely discussed. In the National Lung Cancer Study Trial (NLST) (1) it was estimated that 18% of all cancers were indolent (2). This was based on comparison with the controls being “the golden standard”, i.e. assuming that there were no indolent cancers among those. However, studies in the 20th century with X-ray screening for lung cancers showed the incidence of indolent tumors to be around 25% in such materials.
Methods:
We have made some calculations of the NLST material based on the difference in numbers of lung cancers found at the first screening and the subsequent yearly ones.
Results:
Simple estimation: the 5-year “normal” survival of all lung cancers is 16%; in the NLST X-ray arm only (the controls) it was 53%. If 25% is due to indolence , 12% (53 minus 16 minus 25) must be due to selection. In the screened arm (low CT) , 66% cent were alive, and thus, 38% (66 minus 16 minus 12) must be due to indolent cancers. A sophisticated calculation: The difference in numbers of discovered cancers at first and following screenings in the screened arm only (thus disregarding the controls) can be used to give an indication of the proportion of indolent cancers. This will also result in a percentage of indolent cancers of around 40.
Conclusion:
Screening for lung cancer with low-dose CT has been proven to save lives. However, this comes with the risk of doing more harm than good to those who actually have an indolent cancer. Of all confirmed and staged patients in the CT arm of the NLST, 70 per cent were stage I and II, and almost all of them had surgery. The indolent cancers would be included among these, and if 30% of all cases they will amount to two thirds of the operated patients. Hopefully, new studies might make it possible to discriminate between indolent and life-threatening tumors. In the meantime, we should choose therapies with as little side effects as possible, even if these methods do not maximize the possibility of cure. 1. National Lung Cancer Screening Trial Research Team. Reduced lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomography screening. New Engl J Med 2011; 365:395-409. 2. Patz EF, Pinsky P, Gatsonis et al. Over-diagnosis in low-dose computed tomography screening for lung cancer. JAMA Int Med 2014; 174:269-274.
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P1.03-009 - Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) in Lung Cancer - Associations and Prognostic Role: Results of a Prospective Cohort Study from North India (ID 3758)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R.L. Narasimhan, N. Singh, M.K. Garg, J. Ahluwalia, D. Behera
- Abstract
Background:
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) in cancer remains an under-evaluated and under-diagnosed entity. This prospective study aimed to assess VTE incidence, risk factors for its occurrence and its effect on overall survival (OS) in a cohort of lung cancer (LC) patients at diagnosis and during first-line chemotherapy.
Methods:
Over a 1-year period (July 2014-June 2015), 301 patients with histology-proven LC were screened for deep venous thrombosis (DVT) with compression ultrasonography and for pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) with CT pulmonary angiography at diagnosis and after four cycles of chemotherapy. Patient demographics, comorbidities, presenting symptoms of VTE events, treatment details and outcomes were noted. Logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard analyses were done to determine factors associated with VTE occurrence and OS respectively.
Results:
Most patients had advanced disease (51.2% Stage IV; 31.9% stage IIIB). Overall, 16/301 patients (5.3%) had VTE [DVT alone (n=5), PTE alone (n=2) and DVT with PTE (n=9)] with incidence rate of 90 per 1000 person-years. Median duration from LC diagnosis to VTE event was 96.5 days. All DVT episodes were symptomatic. PTE events were symptomatic in 72.7% and massive (attributable hypotension) in 36.4% for which thrombolysis was done. VTE treatment was associated with minor bleeding in 3 patients but no major bleeding occured. Age, COPD [odds ratio (OR) = 5.2], ECOG PS ≥2 (OR=3.1), and number of extrathoracic metastatic sites (OR=1.9) were independent risk factors for VTE on multivariate logistic regression analysis. No association was observed with histology, EGFR mutation status, other comorbidities or baseline biochemical tests. Chemotherapy regimens, number of chemotherapy cycles and radiological responses were similar amongst patients with and without VTE. Median OS was significantly less in VTE patients [161 (95% CI = 79-243) vs. 311 (95% CI = 270-352) days; p=0.007] with death attributable to VTE in 50%. On multivariate Cox proportional hazard analysis, VTE [hazard ratio (HR) = 2.1 (95% CI = 1.1-3.8)] was independently associated with poor OS as were smoking [HR = 1.7 (95% CI = 1.1-2.7)], ECOG PS ≥ 2 [HR = 1.6 (95% CI = 1.1-2.3)] and serum albumin [continuous variable HR = 0.6 (95% CI = 0.4-0.8)].
Conclusion:
VTE occurs in approximately 5% of newly diagnosed LC patients, is associated with inherently poor prognostic factors (COPD, ECOG PS≥2, hypoalbuminemia and extent of metastasis) and with worse OS independent of other variables. Since all DVT episodes are symptomatic, compression ultrasonography remains the preferred mode for cost-effective initial evaluation of suspected VTE in developing countries.
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P1.03-010 - Characteristics of Lung Cancer Patients Diagnosed Following Emergency Admission (ID 5091)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Ruparel, A. Ejaz, N. Chauhan, M. Ridge, D. Chung, M. Forster, S.M. Janes, T. Newsom-Davis, T. Ahmad, N. Navani
- Abstract
Background:
The proportion of patients with cancers diagnosed via the emergency route and their demographic characteristics vary according to tumour type[1]. Patients with lung cancers diagnosed as emergency presentations suffer worse outcomes[2]. The aim of this observational study was to determine the characteristics of a sample of patients with new lung cancers presenting through the emergency route.
Methods:
Clinical and demographic patient data were extracted from the London Cancer Registry. Data relating to emergency presentations of lung cancer were collected prospectively between January and August 2013 from nine acute trusts across northeast and central London and west Essex. Clinical and demographic characteristics were collated. The total number of emergency presentations were compared to the total numbers of lung cancers diagnosed within the same region over the corresponding time frame from the National Lung Cancer Audit data (NLCA).
Results:
Figure 1From the NLCA, there were an estimated 964 lung cancers recorded within the London cancer region during the study period. Of these, 310 (32%) lung cancers were recorded in the London Cancer registry as having presented via the emergency route. The median age of these patients was 73. The majority of patients were white and from areas of increased social deprivation. The proportion of patients presenting with stage IV disease was 67%, while 58% had a performance status of 0-2. The most common presenting symptoms were respiratory. 95% of patients were treated with palliative rather than curative intent.
Conclusion:
Approximately one third of new lung cancers within London Cancer are diagnosed following emergency admission. The next phase of work includes incorporating results from the London Cancer Alliance to provide pan-London data and to develop tools in primary care to identify these patients prior to emergency admission.
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- Abstract
Background:
To investigate the clinical features of lung cancer among asthmatic patients.
Methods:
Retrospectively analyzed the clinical characteristics of 19 patients with bronchial asthmatic and lung cancer that were treated by the second hospital of Jilin university from 2009 to 2015.
Results:
The morbidity of lung cancer in bronchial asthma patients accounted for 1.4% of the patients in our hospital. All patients were older than 40 years old, among which 11 (58%) were over 60. Cough and expectoration were the major clinical symptoms which occurred in 14 cases(74%). According to the pathological results, 4 cases were squamous cell carcinoma(21%), 7 were small cell carcinoma(37%), 7 wereadenocarcinoma(37%), and only 1 case were poorly differentiated non-small cell carcinoma(5%). In the small cell lung cancers, the primary cancer in 5 cases were still at limited stage, in 2 cases had developed into a extensive tumor. In non small cell lung cancers, there were 2 cases at stage II, 2 cases at stage Ⅲa, 7 cases at stage Ⅲb and 1 cases at stage IV. From the chest CT performance, the patchy and mass like nodules were recognized as the main manifestations. In all the 19 patients, manifestations of asthma were not effectively managed. In 10 of the patients, the PS score was poor and did not receive any anti tumor treatment,while other 9 cases received anti tumor therapy.
Conclusion:
Bronchial asthma, especially those being not well controlled, is a potential risk factor for lung cancer., Lung cancer should be awared in the acute episode of asthma. For asthma exacerbation in patients over 60 years old, the chest CT scan is a recommended choice, or regularly reviewed by low dose CT screening to discover lung cancer at early stage and improve prognosis. But the anti tumor therapy of severe asthma combined with lung cancer patients is still a difficult problem.
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P1.03-012 - Experience with BioSentryTM Tract Sealant System for Percutaneous CT-Guided Lung Nodule Biopsies in an Oncology Population (ID 5727)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P. de Groot, G. Shroff, J. Ahrar, G.M. Gladish, B. Sabloff, C. Moran, S. Gupta, J.Y. Chang, G. Gladish, J. Erasmus
- Abstract
Background:
Tract sealants are being used more frequently to reduce pneumothoraces and chest tube placement in patients undergoing lung biopsy. Use of a sealant plug can produce visible biopsy tracts on follow-up imaging and can mimic the appearance of malignant tract seeding. The purpose of our study was to characterize these tracts and determine the likelihood of malignant seeding to inform further management including localized radiation therapy and/or surgical planning.
Methods:
Over a 15 month period 407 lung biopsies were performed in patients with known or suspected thoracic and extrathoracic malignancies using a BioSentry Tract Sealant System; 321 cases had follow up CT studies. 4 chest radiologists retrospectively analyzed subsequent imaging to determine the incidence, appearance, temporal relationship and evolution of biopsy tracts. Tracts that decreased or did not change on follow-up were considered benign. 10 surgically resected cases were retrospectively examined by a pathologist for malignant tract seeding.
Results:
321 cases were analyzed. 237 (74%) had a visible biopsy tract on CT (95%CI 0.69, 0.78) (primary lung cancer n=90, metastases n=81, benign nodule n=66). All tracts were identified on 1st follow-up imaging at 1-3 months post-biopsy. Tracts were typically serpiginous and smooth or lobulated with a thickness of 2-5 mm. 218/237 (92%) tracts were unchanged over time (mean follow up, 12 months). 15/237 (6.3%) decreased in thickness. Unchanged or decreasing tracts were considered negative for malignant seeding. Increase in tract thickness or nodularity occurred in 4/237 (1.8%), suspicious for malignant tract seeding. 0/90 (0%) biopsy tracts in primary lung cancer showed progressive increase. 4/81 (4.9%) tracts in patients with metastases showed increase (mean, 99 days post-biopsy). 10 resected nodules (5 primary NSCLCs, 5 metastases) had no malignant tract seeding at histology.
Conclusion:
An observable biopsy tract on CT is common after lung biopsy using the BioSentry[TM] device. Tracts from biopsy of primary lung cancers using the BioSentry device had no malignant seeding and they should have no impact on surgical resection or localized radiation therapy. In the study population, patients who underwent lung biopsy for metastasis had a higher than expected rate of malignant seeding manifested by increased track thickness over time, requiring further investigation.
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- Abstract
Background:
Radiographic screening, diagnosing, staging, and assessing procedures with ironizing radiation-based tests are currently most widely used for lung cancer. However, one of the major harms of these imaging tests is the potential for radiation-induced carcinogenesis. Whether radiographic screening, diagnosing, staging, and assessing procedures increase cancer incidence and death in patients exposed to radiation of medical sources is ignored in the context of indefinite answer. We aimed to evaluate the ability of radiation-free diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) to diagnose, assess and detect early response to chemotherapy in lung cancer patients.
Methods:
This study was approved by the institutional review board, and written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. Ninety patients with lung cancer as confirmed by pathologic examination (25 women, 65 men; mean age, 57 years) who underwent chemotherapy were enrolled between November 2014 and October 2015. All patients underwent MRI and computed tomography (CT), as the reference test, at baseline and after the second course of chemotherapy. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of each lung carcinoma was calculated from images. Ki-67 scores and tumor markers in the serum, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCC), were determined. ADC values were compared among different histopathologic types and between pretreatment and posttreatment. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was performed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of ADC and its combination with tumor markers. The relationship between the baseline ADC values with Ki-67 scores and final tumor size reduction were analyzed by using the Pearson correlation coefficient. This study is registered with Clinical Trials.gov (NCT02320617).
Results:
Before treatment, there were significant differences between NSCLC and SCLC (P=0.000), adenocarcinoma and SCLC (P=0.000), and squamous cell carcinoma and SCLC (P=0.002). ADC values and Ki-67 score showed negative correlation (r=−0.408, P=0.000). In ROC analysis, area under curve (AUC) of ADC in combination with CEA, SCC and NSE was 0.772, 0.821 and 0.761, respectively. ADC values were significantly different between pretreatment and posttreatment (P=0.001), and partial response (PR) and stable disease (SD) groups. ADC at baseline was negatively correlated with tumor size reduction (r=−0.434, P=0.017). As well, AUC of ADC after treatment to discriminate PR and SD groups was 0.804.
Conclusion:
Our findings extended the previous findings by that ADC in DW-MRI could: (1) discriminate different histopathologic types; (2) evaluate the malignancy; (3) predict and monitor the early response to chemotherapy. Radiation-free DW-MRI seems to be a promising tool for management of lung cancer.
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P1.03-014 - Value of Performing Fine Needle Aspiration with Core Biopsy for Genomic Mutation Assessment in Percutaneous Lung Biopsies (ID 6324)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.H. Sabir, L.M. Frota Lima
- Abstract
Background:
Personalized care of lung cancer patients requires determination of targetable genetic mutations. This study was performed to investigate the added value of performing fine needle aspiration (FNA) with core biopsy in percutaneous lung biopsy to assess clinically relevant genomic mutations in EGFR, KRAS and BRAF. ALK mutation was assessed separately through FISH, which was not assessed in this study.
Methods:
Retrospective analysis of all CT-guided lung biopsies in lung cancer patients with samples sent for next generation sequencing (NGS) with a 50-gene multiplex panel during 2013 and 2014. Procedures were performed using 19 gauge coaxial guides, 20 gauge side-cutting core needles and 22 gauge Chiba needles. Samples were processed for histological evaluation. The remaining material was reviewed for adequate tumor cellularity (>20%) by pathology. If the specimen collected through core biopsy did not present adequate tumor cellularity, the FNA material was reviewed and sent for mutation analysis. DNA was extracted and sequenced with a 50-gene multiplex platform (Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine). If the samples were not adequate for NGS, single gene sequencing was performed for the requested genetic mutations. Patient demographic, lesion imaging features, procedure technique and molecular results were collected. Descriptive statistics were tabulated.
Results:
A total of 188 patient met the criteria for this study. 184 patients had FNA and core biopsy together and 4 had only FNA. 19 out of 184 (10.32%) core biopsy specimen had <20% tumor cellularity and had FNA material sent for NGS. The average age was 66 years old, 57.44% of the patients were female and 65.42% had history of smoking. 29.78% had systemic treatment before the biopsy, 78.72% of the tumor were solid and the average lesion size was 3.9 cm (range 0.8 to 15.6 cm). The overall adequacy of core biopsy specimen for assessing requested genetic mutations was 78.80% (135 out of 184) and the adequacy of combined core biopsy and/or FNA specimen for assessing requested genetic mutations was 87.76% (152 out of 188).
Conclusion:
The addition of FNA to core during percutaneous lung biopsies done in lung cancer patients for assessment of actionable genetic mutations significantly increased the success rate from 78.89% to 87.76%.
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P1.03-015 - Assessment of Response of FDG-PET Using Total Lesion Glycolysis (TLG) in NSCLC Patients Treated with Nivolumab: Results of a Pilot Study (ID 4895)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Fichera, M.M. Aiello, L. Noto, N. Restuccia, M. Ippolito, H.J. Soto Parra
- Abstract
Background:
Recent studies using FDG-PET measure the total volumes of the FDG-avid lesions to represent whole-body total metabolic tumor volume (MTV) demonstrating prognostic significance in NSCLC. Total lesion glycolysis (TLG) is the product of mean SUV and MTV and studies have shown the usefulness of TLG for evaluating treatment response. We decide to preliminarily explore the role of TLG, which combines the volumetric and metabolic information of the FDG-PET, as an early predictor of response to nivolumab in NSCLC patients and to determine whether in these patients TLG could provide a better evaluation of response when compared to RECIST.
Methods:
Between September 2015 and April 2016, we enrolled 15 previously treated advanced NSCLC patients to receive nivolumab 3 mg/kg q2w. The CT-scan and FDG-PET evaluation were performed before starting therapy and after 8 weeks (early evaluation). We compared responses assessed by CT-scan and FDG-PET at 8 weeks according to RECIST 1.1 and TLG parameter respectively. We also performed a CT-scan at 12 weeks to confirm or refute the results of the assessement at 8 weeks.
Results:
There are no standard cut-offs for the TLG parameter. A ROC curve was used to obtain thresholds for the TLG criteria. The ROC study suggested a TLG value between -76% and +76% to define an SD. We considered a TLG value above +76% to define a PD, while a TLG inferior to -76% was necessary to define a PR. In one patient the evaluation at 8 weeks according to TLG criteria showed PD. The same patient presented SD according to RECIST assessed by CT-scan at 8 weeks. For this patient CT-scan at 12 weeks confirmed PD. In this case the TLG of the FDG-PET early identified the patient's progression better than CT-scan. In other two patients, TLG criteria assessed at 8 weeks identified a PR in contrast with SD according to RECIST assessed by CT-scan at 8 weeks. CT-scan at 12 weeks confirmed PRs for both these patients. Even in this two cases the evaluation of TLG by FDG-PET early recognized patient's responses better than CT-scan. For the remaining 12 patients no differences in terms of responses were observed between RECIST and TLG criteria at 8 weeks when compared to RECIST assessed by CT-scan at 12 weeks.
Conclusion:
These preliminary results from this small study suggest that TLG criteria could provide an early identification of response to nivolumab in NSCLC patients.
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- Abstract
Background:
Two-dimensional CT measurement considered unreliable in the evaluation of small pulmonary nodule less than 2 cm, and a nodule less than 1 cm in diameter considered non-measurable according to RECIST criteria. The aim of this study was to determine the accuracy of visual assessment on the growth of immeasurable small pulmonary nodules less than 1 cm in diameter on CT.
Methods:
We selected 125 CT images (1-mm slice thickness axial images, lung window setting, lung algorithm) which have a small pulmonary nodule less than 1cm. Then, we magnified the pulmonary nodules to 120% in diameter using the Photoshop. We coupled these images to 125 sets of ingrowth and growth groups, respectively. Four radiologists with varying experience read these sets to five-point scale using visual assessment (definitely ingrowth, probably ingrowth, possibly growth, probably growth, and definitely growth).
Results:
The areas under the receiver-operator characteristic curves of visual assessment on growth of small pulmonary nodules were 0.975 for observer 1, 0.986 for observer 2, 0.989 for observer 3, and 0.913 for observer 4, respectively. Sensitivities were 96.0% (120/125), 98.4% (123/125), 98.4% (123/125), and 88.0% (110/125), respectively. Specificities were 99.2% (124/125), 99.2% (123/125), 98.4% (124/125), and 96.8% (121/125), respectively.
Conclusion:
Visual assessment showed high diagnostic performance for determining growth of non-measurable target pulmonary nodules with 20% increase in diameter.
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P1.03-017 - Does PET/CT SUVmax Value Correlate with Long-Term Survival in Patients with Surgically Treated Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 5786)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): H. Melek, H.V. Kara, A. Demir, G. Cetinkaya, A. Turna, A.S. Bayram, M.M. Erol, A. Toker, K. Kaynak, C. Gebitekin
- Abstract
Background:
Positron emission tomography (PET/CT), which detects the biologic activity of tumor cells is routinely used in staging of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the role of PET/CT in predicting disease free long-term survival of surgically treated stage I NSCLC is not clear. In this study, we aimed to investigate prognostic value of metabolic uptake (SUVmax) of the tumor in patients with surgically treated stage I NSCLC
Methods:
Two-hundred and sixty patients who had preoperative PET/CT and pulmonary resection for stage I NSCLC between 2005 and 2015 were included into study. The patients were devided into four groups according to the SUVmax value, 0-5, group 1, 5-10 group 2, 10-15 group 3 and over 15 group 4. Lung resection, segmentectomy/lobectomy, was performed within 30 days of PET/CT in all patients. Tumor SUVmax and other potential prognostic variables were chosen for analysis in this study. Patients univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to identify prognostic factors associated with long-term survival.
Results:
There were 53 females and 207 males with a mean age of 61,5 (range 20-84). The mean SUVmax value of the tumors in PET/CT was 10,1 (1-48). The type of the lung resection was segmentectomy in 33(12,7%) and lobectomy in 227(87,3%). Pathologic staging of the tumor was stage 1A in 156(60%), and stage 1B in 104(40%). Median follow-up time was 44 months, and overall 5-year survival rate was 81,7% and there was no statistically significant difference between the groups (p=0,3). SUVmax value of the tumor was not effected by age, gender, tumor type and location (peripheral or central)(p>0,05). However, it was found that the SUVmax value significantly increased along with tumor size (p<0,05. ). Logistic regression analysis revealed that, there is an association between perineural invasion and SUVmax value of the tumor (p=0.049).
Conclusion:
Although the previous studies revealed correlation between higher SUVmax values and impaired long term survival, this study revealed no correlation between SUVmax values and long term survival in patients with surgically treated stage I NSCLC. However, tumors with higher SUVmax values have higher chance of perineural invasion. Further studies for possible relationship between metabolic activity and histopathologic characteristics of the tumors are warranted.
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P1.03-018 - FDG-PET/CT in Patients with EGFR-Mutated NSCLC Treated with TKI. Can We Identify Early Lesions at Higher Risk of Progression? (ID 6159)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Petyt, D. Bellevre, A. Adens, H. Lahousse, G. Collet, C. Hossein-Foucher, S. Baldacci, X. Dhalluin, M. Willemin, A. Baranzelli, A. Scherpereel, A.B. Cortot
- Abstract
Background:
EGFR TKIs in EGFR-mutated NSCLC patients yield heterogeneous progression-free survivals ranging from <3 months to >3 years. Early identification of lesions that are more likely to progress may provide rationale for aggressive treatment of these lesions. We questioned whether FDG-PET/CT could identify early lesions with higher risk of progression.
Methods:
Eighty-nine lesions from 13 caucasian EGFR-mutated NSCLC patients treated with TKI were analyzed. Date of progression for each lesion was collected. SUVmax, Metabolic Tumor Volume (MTV), Total Lesion Glycolysis (TLG) were measured on baseline and early follow-up PET/CT performed 2-3 months later. Variations between the 2 PET/CT (ΔSUVmax, ΔMTV, ΔTLG) were calculated. Medians were used as cut-off values for statistical analysis. Risk of progression was analyzed according to PET/CT parameters and Odds Ratios (OR) were calculated.
Results:
The best metabolic predictors of progression were high SUVmax (>0, i.e. incomplete visual response, OR =9.6, p<0.001), high MTV (>0, OR=8.3, p<0.001) and high TLG (>0, OR=9.6, p<0.001) on the early follow-up PET/CT. ΔSUVmax<97.6% (OR=3.9, p=0.02) was also associated with early progression, whereas ΔMTV (p=0.23) and ΔTLG (p=0.17) were not.
Conclusion:
Lesions with incomplete visual response on early follow-up FDG-PET/CT upon EGFR TKIs in EGFR-mutated NSCLC show significantly higher risk of progression. Aggressive treatment of these lesions with residual metabolic activity may be further evaluated.
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P1.03-019 - Imaging of Anti-PD1 Therapy Response in Advanced Non-Small Lung Cancer (ID 6316)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.I. Katz, M. Hammer, S.J. Bagley, C. Aggarwal, J. Bauml, C. Langer
- Abstract
Background:
Therapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors can lead to unconventional tumor responses and autoimmune-mediated adverse effects resulting from immune activation. Here we sought to determine pseudo-progression and radiologically-evident anti-PD1 therapy mediated adverse events in routine clinical management in the advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) population.
Methods:
A retrospective study was conducted of all adult NSCLC patients treated with anti-PD1 agents at our institution. Electronic medical records were reviewed to determine clinical assessment of anti-PD1 therapy response and imaging reports at restaging. Patients that did not have available follow-up imaging or clinical data while on anti-PD1-therapy were excluded from the study. Patient imaging exams with clinically suspected tumor pseudo-progression at 1[st] re-staging were analyzed to determine if subsequent imaging demonstrated pseudo-progression or true progression. The incidence of radiographically-evident adverse events attributed to anti-PD1 therapy by the oncologist were noted.
Results:
A total of 228 patients were started on anti-PD1 therapy at our institution, of which a total of 166 were evaluable. Of the evaluable patients, 80% of those received nivolumab and the remaining 20% received pembrolizumab. The overall response rate (complete response + partial response) was 23% at 1[st] restaging. Of these patients, 22 patients were suspected of pseudo-progression due to tumor enlargement and/or development of new lesions during the 1[st] 4-6 weeks of therapy and were maintained on anti-PD1 therapy. Of these patients, there were 5 confirmed cases of pseudo-progression at subsequent restaging. Radiologically-evident adverse events occurred in less than 5% of the population, primarily manifesting as pneumonitis.
Conclusion:
Pseudo-progression and radiographically-evident adverse events are important but uncommon occurrences in the setting of anti-PD1 therapy for advanced NSCLC.
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P1.03-020 - FDG-PET SUVmax Does Not Correlate with Glucose Metabolism in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (ID 6418)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Kernstine, B. Faubert, C. Hensley, L. Cai, J. Torrealba, D. Oliver, R. Lenkinski, C. Malloy, R. Deberardinis
- Abstract
Background:
In non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC),[ 18]fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) assists in diagnosing, staging, and evaluating treatment response. One parameter of the FDG-PET, the maximum standard uptake value (SUV~max~), has been used as an objective measure of cancer viability and that FDG accumulation is the result of altered tumor glycolysis. The objective of this investigation is to use metabolic flux analysis to determine if the SUV~max~ is predictive of tumor metabolism.
Methods:
In this prospective human subjects-approved clinical trial, 22 untreated potentially-resectable patients with confirmed NSCLC underwent FDG-PET computed tomography and dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging. On the day of surgery, the patients received an intravenous bolus and then continuous infusion of [13]C-glucose for 3 hours prior to resection. Blood samples were routinely taken and after the lung cancer was removed, biopsies from tumor (T) and normal lung (NL). Blood and tissue metabolite mass spectrometry analysis was performed and compared with clinical parameters including SUV~max~, DCE tissue perfusion, oncogenotype, tumor volume (TV), stage, and grade.
Results:
There were 7 males, 8 never-smokers, mean age 67 (43-84), mean TV 18.7 cm[3] (1.3-171.9), and mean SUVm 11.8 (0.7-32.0; 3 were < 2.5). The most relevant metabolite and clinical data can be found in Spearman Correlation Analysis in Figure 1. T relative to NL revealed increased glycolysis and glucose oxidation. SUV~max~ did not correlate with any glucose-dependent metabolites. TV correlated with metabolic markers related to fuel choice, larger tumors trending to use an alternative nutrient, including lactate.Figure 1
Conclusion:
Although all FDG-PET-positive tumors metabolized glucose, the SUVmax did not predict the overall extent or any specific pathway of glucose metabolism. TV predicts a propensity to consume alternative fuels, such as lactate, in addition to glucose.
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P1.03-021 - Initial Results from A Novel and Low Cost Method For Measuring CT Image Quality (ID 6317)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R.S. Avila, D.F. Yankelevitz, R. Yip, C.I. Henschke
- Abstract
Background:
Accurate measurement of change in tumor size in Computed Tomography images is critical for lung nodule differential diagnosis. Standard CT scanner calibration phantoms and methods are routinely relied upon to ensure that image quality is generally sufficient for a wide range of imaging tasks. However, high precision medical imaging applications, such as RECIST and volumetric tumor change measurement, require much greater attention to maintaining consistently high image quality characteristics. A new ultra-low cost, and cloud based method has been developed to quickly assess the image quality of CT scanners and imaging protocols that provides both estimates of clinical task performance, such as lung tumor size measurement error rates, and fundamental image quality performance metrics. In addition, multiple large imaging organizations have made available lung cancer screening guidance documents indicating that CT slice thicknesses of <= 1.25 mm are either required or preferred.
Methods:
To demonstrate the image quality site measurement capability a global challenge was launched during May and June of 2016 that allowed lung cancer screening sites to scan three rolls of 3M ¾ x 1000 inch Scotch Magic ™ Tape placed at increasing distances from iso-center on the CT table and using their standard low dose lung cancer screening protocol. Fully automated software detected the rolls of tape and estimated fundamental image quality parameters including CT linearity, 3D resolution, noise, and level of edge enhancement. In addition, metrics indicating the expected detection and volume change measurement performance for different diameter lung nodules were calculated.
Results:
A total of 27 clinical sites participated in the challenge and provided CT imaging data on over 54 CT scanners representing 18 scanner models made by Siemens, GE, Philips, and Toshiba. 17 out of 27 (63%) clinical sites provided data with <= 1.25mm DICOM specified slice thickness. However, only 19% of sites used <= 1.25mm slice thickness and a reconstruction kernel that avoided excessive smoothing and avoided high levels of edge enhancement.
Conclusion:
A new rapid, ultra-low cost, and cloud based method for assessing the quality of CT imaging studies has revealed poor adherence to recommended protocols and large levels of variation in fundamental image quality properties. Utilization of these new tools has the potential to help correct image quality issues in clinical studies.
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P1.03-022 - Possibility of FDG-PET Predicting the Clinicopathological Characteristics and Prognosis of Lung Adenocarcinoma: Multicenter Study (ID 5799)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Matsuura, K.T. Imai, N. Kajiwara, T. Ohira, N. Ikeda, H. Nakayama, H. Ito, M. Okada, Y. Miyata
- Abstract
Background:
This multicenter study aimed to investigate the relationship of standardized uptake value (SUV) on [18F]-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) and the clinicopathological characteristics of lung adenocarcinomas, and if it can be a predictor of prognosis of those patients.
Methods:
A total of 870 patients of adenocarcinoma patients received FDG-PET preoperatively and underwent curative resection with systematic lymph node dissection. The relationship among histological characteristics, pathological staging, prognosis, and SUV on FDG-PETmax was retrospectively examined.
Results:
The pathological stages of the cases were IA 526, IB 182, IIA 62, IIB 27, IIIA 67, IIIB 1, and IV 5, respectively. Pathological N1 (n = 60) and N2 (n = 58) cases showed a significantly higher SUVmax than N0 (n = 752) (9.15 ± 7.13 and 8.58 ± 6.14 vs 3.23 ± 4.16). Cases with pathological tumor invasiveness such as lymphatic, vascular or pleural infiltration showed a significantly higher SUVmax than cases with no invasiveness. (Ly negative; n=687, 2.76±3.59 vs Ly positive; n=183, 7.67±6.23, and v0; n=641, 2.18±2.58 vs v1 or 2; n=229, 8.30±6.23. p<0.001, respectively) The areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve for SUVmax used to predict the relapse-free survival was 2.9 (p < 0.001) in adenocarcinoma. The 3-year relapse-free survival was 97%/66% (SUVmax lower/ higher than 2.9) in adenocarcinoma. SUVmax was parallel to the aggressive nature based on histological subtypes (AIS +MIA; n=76, 0.51±0.58, Lepidic + Papillary + Acinar; n=686, 3.52±4.12, and Solid + Micropapillary; n=84, 8.52±6.67), which was statistically significant. (p<0.001 respectively)
Conclusion:
SUVmax of the primary tumor reflected the biological malignancy of lung adenocarcinomas. SUVmax is also useful for predicting pathological stage and prognosis. Multimodality treatment might be recommended in cases of high UVmax.
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P1.03-023 - Ground-Glass Opacity (GGO) with Semi-Consolidation: Clinicopathological and Radiological Correlations Compared to Pure-GGOs of the Lung (ID 5656)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Suzuki, A. Hattori, T. Matsunaga, K. Takamochi, S. Oh, K. Suzuki
- Abstract
Background:
There has been a great advancement in understanding natural history of ground-glass opacity (GGO), which represents histological lepidic growth in early stage pulmonary adenocarcinoma. Among them, some GGO lesions reveal increased density of GGOs without obvious consolidation on thin-section computed tomography (TSCT), i.e., GGO with semi-consolidation. However, little is known regarding clinicopathological and radiological relationship of this new entity.
Methods:
During 2004 and 2016, we underwent AAA (2327) surgical resections for clinical-stage IA lung cadenocarcinoma. Among them, 286 (12.3%) GGO lesions without any consolidations were identified based on the findings on TSCT. They were categorized into two groups; pure-GGO (PG) and GGO with semi-consolidation (SC) according to the radiological findings. Semi-consolidation is defined as GGO with increased homogenous density without consolidation on TSCT. Clinicopathological factors were analyzed between these two groups. Survivals were calculated by Kaplan-Meier estimation methods.
Results:
Of the cases, 172 (60.1%) showed PG and 114 (39.8%) showed SC. Significant or marginal differences were clinically observed between PG and SG groups regarding age (59.4y vs. 63.0y, p=0.02), pack-year smoking status (10.2 vs. 11.6, p=0.084), tumor size (12.2cm vs. 13.9cm, p=0.06), respectively. Noninvasive lesions including atypical adenomatous hyperplasia, adenocarcinoma in situ or minimally invasive adenocarcinoma were observed in 144 patients (83.7%) of PG and 74 (64.9%) of SC, however, the frequency of invasive adenocarcinoma or lymph-vascular invasions were significantly higher in SC group compared to PG group (15.7% vs 33.9%, p=0.001: 4.3% vs 0.5%, p=0.040) despite their GGO appearances. There was no lymph node metastasis in both PG and SC groups. Overall lung-cancer specific survival is 100% to date in both PG/SC groups with mean follow-up period of 97months.
Conclusion:
Despite the conventionally same category as a native GGO appearance on TSCT, invasive adenocarcinoma was frequently observed in radiologically dense GGO lesions, indicating that PG might progress to SC over time. Surgical outcome for both groups are excellent. Therefore, more studies regarding optimal surgical procedures and long-term outcome of these two groups should be warranted.
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P1.03-024 - Accuracy of Combined Semantic and Computational CT Features in Predicting Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Subtype (ID 3922)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): U. Bashir, A. Bille, L. Toufektzian, E. McLean, M. Siddique, V. Goh, G. Cook
- Abstract
Background:
With improvements in molecular treatment, it is increasingly important to differentiate non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) subtypes, i.e., adenocarcinoma(ADCA) from squamous cell cancer(SCCA). Many patients cannot undergo invasive biopsy procedures and so non-invasive classification methods would be helpful in their management. Most studies using CT scans for this purpose have used either semantic (visual assessment of CT images by a radiologist) or computational texture features, yielding modest accuracy. We hypothesized that combined semantic and computational assessment of CT scans would improve the accuracy of CT in NSCLC classification.
Methods:
67 patients (38 ADC, 29 SCCA) underwent contrast-enhanced chest CT for lung cancer staging. Tumor volumes of interests (VOI) were drawn semi-automatically. 10 qualitative semantic and 361 computational texture features were derived from the VOIs. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models(MLRM) were developed for combinations of semantic and texture features. Sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve were computed. 10-fold cross-validation was used to prevent overfitting.
Results:
Univariate models found two semantic (air-bronchogram, shape) and five texture parameters (wavelet-transform based: GLCM_Correlation, GLRL_LGRE, GLRL_LGRE, GLRL_LGRE, and original VOI-based GLSZM_ZSN[1]) to be most predictive of tumor class (p-value <0.01). Sensitivity, specificity, and AUROC for MLRM utilizing semantic features alone was 64.2%, 73.3%, and 0.76, and that of MLRM for texture features alone was 74.6%, 72.3%, and 0.79, respectively. For combined model involving semantic and texture features (i.e., air-bronchogram and GLCM_Correlation), respective values were 81.2%, 90%, and 0.9. [1] GLCM: gray-level cooccurence matrix, GLRL_LGRE: gray-level run-length matrix-derived low gray run emphasis, GLSZM_ZSN: Gray-level size-zone matrix-derived zone-size nonuniformityFigure 1 Figure 1. ROC curves comparing performance of multivariate models comprising semantic (blue line), texture (red line), and combined (semantic and texture - green line) predictors.
Conclusion:
Combined semantic and computational texture assessment of lung cancer CT images is highly accurate in differentiation of SCCA and ADCA.
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P1.03-025 - Serum KL-6 Levels in Patients with Lung Cancer (ID 4236)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Yoshimasu, M. Kawago, Y. Hirai, S. Oura, Y. Kokawa, M. Miyasaka, M. Honda, Y. Aoishi, A. Oku, Y. Nishimura
- Abstract
Background:
Serum levels of KL-6 are widely used as an indicator of activity of interstitial lung disease. Although KL-6 was initially developed as a serum marker for malignancies, it is still unknown if KL-6 can be used as a biological marker of lung cancer. This study aimed to determine the properties of serum KL-6 levels in patients with lung cancer.
Methods:
First, serum KL-6 elimination kinetics after resection of lung cancer was investigated in 7 patients. Postoperative time course of serum KL-6 levels was analyzed using non-linear least square analysis with the fitting equation; C(t)=C~0~exp(-kt)+Cp, where k is the rate constant of elimination. The biological half-life was calculated as log~e~2/k. Next, serum KL-6, CEA, and CYFRA levels of patients with lung cancer and benign chest disease were retrospectively reviewed. A total of 226 patients with lung cancer and 103 patients with benign chest disease were included in this study. Serum KL-6 levels were measured using the electrochemiluminescence immunoassay method. The cut-off level of KL-6 was 500 U/ ml.
Results:
Rate constant of elimination and biological half-life of KL-6 in initial 7 patients were 0.827±0.275 day[-1] and 0.93±0.35 day, respectively. These data implies that lung cancer cells produce KL-6 molecule and release it into the serum. Among 329 patients, serum KL-6 levels were above the cut-off level in 44 patients (19.5%) with lung cancer and 4 patients (3.9%) with benign chest disease. The mean serum KL-6 level in patients with lung cancer was significantly (p=0.0027) higher (375 ± 232 U/ ml) than that in patients with benign chest disease (296 ± 177 U/ml). Serum KL-6 levels in patients with lung cancer were significantly correlated with tumor size (p<0.0001), stage (p<0.0001), and individual TNM descriptors (T; p<0.0001, N; p=0.0047, M; p=0.0003). ROC analysis revealed that AUC of KL-6 was 0.6348 (p=0.0015), and that was inferior to CEA (AUC=0.8127, p<0.0001) and CYFRA (AUC=0.7103, p<0.0001). The sensitivity, specificity, true positive rate, true negative rate, and accuracy of KL-6 were 19.5%, 95.0%, 91.7%, 35.2%, and 43.5%, respectively.
Conclusion:
Serum KL-6 levels are well correlated with the progressiveness of lung cancer. KL-6 might be useful as a biological marker to monitor the recurrence and the effect of therapy in lung cancer.
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P1.03-026 - Measurement of Pulmonary Artery on CT to Predict Acute Exacerbation of Interstitial Pneumonia after Pulmonary Resection for Lung Cancer (ID 4882)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Ui, M. Kobayashi, Y. Kawada, Y. Kurihara, Y. Sugita, S. Kumazawa, C. Takasaki, H. Ishibashi, K. Okubo
- Abstract
Background:
Interstitial pneumonia (IP) is often accompanied by pulmonary hypertension (PH) that is considered to be fatal and has relation to acute exacerbation. To diagnose PH, right heart catheterization is generally required, but it is invasive. Nowadays pulmonary artery diameter (dPA) and the ratio of dPA to ascending aorta diameter (rPA) measured by CT are reported to be indicators of PH. We examined whether dPA and rPA could be predictors of acute exacerbation of IP after pulmonary resection for lung cancer.
Methods:
We retrospectively analyzes 97 patients with IP who had undergone pulmonary resection for lung cancer at Tokyo Medical and Dental University between July 2010 and December 2015. We examined sex, surgical procedures, KL-6, surfactant protein D, post-operative prolonged airleakage, combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema (CPFE), percent diffusing capacity of lung for carbon monoxide (%DLCO), dPA and rPA.
Results:
The mean age was 71 years (range, 43-86 years), and 79 patients were males and 18 were females. 47 patients was diagnosed with CPFE before surgery. Acute exacerbation occurred in 8 patients. Univariate analysis revealed that CPFE, %DLCO and rPA were predictors of acute exacerbation after surgery. In multivariate analysis, CPFE and rPA were identified as independent predictors of acute exacerbation after surgery (p=0.046 and 0.036, respectively).
Conclusion:
In interstitial pneumonia, rPA measured by CT is effective to predict acute exacerbation after pulmonary resection for lung cancer.
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P1.03-027 - Clinical and Histological Features Associated with SUV in FDG-PET-CT in Patients with Adenocarcinoma of the Lung (ID 4783)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Tufman, F. Siokou, U. Mueller-Lisse, F. Berger, K. Kahnert, T. Pfluger, S. Reu, J. Stump, H. Winter, R. Huber
- Abstract
Background:
FDG-PET-CT is increasingly used for staging and treatment monitoring in NSCLC. The prognostic and possibly predictive value of the standardized-uptake-value (SUV), and the clinical, molecular and pathological features contributing to SUV levels have not been well described.
Methods:
We retrospectively reviewed the records of patients staged with FDG-PET-CT and correlated SUV values before and during treatment with clinical and pathological features of the tumour including CRP as a marker of systemic inflammation, adenocarcinoma subtype (solid, lepidic etc.), and Ki67, as a marker of tumour proliferation.
Results:
190 patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung were identified. 110 had FDG-PET-CT staging and were included in this analysis. Tumour subtypes were as follows: 50.0% solid, 16.4% acinar, 9.1% papillary, 7.3% lepidic, 1.8% micropapillary, 15.4% other. 70 patients received systemic treatment and 40 were treated surgically. The mean primary-tumour-SUV for all patients was 11.1 (for patients treated medically, 13.5, and for those treated surgically, 8.6). Ki67 expression in the tumour was lowest in the group with SUV < 10 (38.6%) and highest in the group with SUV > 20 (56.0). The group with SUV 11-19 had a moderate Ki67 expression (47.9%). In patients with surgical tumour samples there was a trend towards higher SUV in patients with tumours showing 30% or more solid growth pattern (mean SUV 11.4) and lower SUV in patients with any lepidic growth (mean SUV 4.0) (p=0.002). Systemic markers of inflammation were significantly higher in patients whose tumours had SUV>10 (mean CRP, 2.3 mg/dl; mean leukocytes, 9.7 G/L) than in patients with low-SUV tumours (<5) (mean CRP, 0.4 mg/dl, p=0.0186; mean leukocytes, 7.2 G/L, p=0.014).
Conclusion:
Multiple factors appear to be associated with higher or lower SUV values, including adenocarcinoma subtype, proliferation index of the tumour and systemic inflammation. These factors should be taken into account when interpreting FDG-PET-CT SUV values in clinical practice. The correlation of FDG-PET-CT SUV values with inflamed tumour phenotypes, and the possible predictive value of SUV for response to immune therapies, should be further investigated.
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P1.03-028 - Wolf in Sheep's Clothing - Primary Lung Cancer Mimicking Benign Diseases (ID 3937)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Snoeckx, D. Desbuquoit, A. Dendooven, M.J. Spinhoven, B.I. Hiddinga, L. Carp, P.E. Van Schil, P.M. Parizel, J.P. Van Meerbeeck
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer is the biggest cancer killer and typically presents as mass or nodule, round or oval in shape. Recognition and diagnosis of these typical cases is often straightforward, whereas diagnosis of uncommon manifestations of primary lung cancer certainly is far more challenging. The aim of this pictorial essay is to illustrate the Computed Tomography (CT) and histopathology findings of uncommon manifestations of primary lung cancer with focus on these entities that mimic benign diseases.
Methods:
Cases presented were collected during the Multidisciplinary Thoracic Oncology Tumor Board between January 2014 and May 2016 and have histopathologic proof.
Results:
Lung cancer can mimic a variety of benign diseases, including infection, granulomatous disease, lung abscess, postinfectious scarring, mediastinal mass, emphysema, atelectasis and pleural disease. Previous history, clinical and biochemical parameters are certainly helpful and necessary in the assessment of these cases, but often aspecific and inconclusive. Whereas 18FDG-PET is the cornerstone in diagnosis and staging of lung cancer, it’s role in these uncommon manifestations is less straightforward since benign diseases, such as granulomatous and infectious diseases may also present with increased FDG-uptake. Chest CT is the imaging modality of choice and plays a central role in these cases. ‘Irregular air bronchogram sign’ in pneumonia-like lung cancer, ‘drowned lung sign’ in obstructive atelectasis and cortical bone erosion in lung cancer mimicking pleural disease are important signs that point to a malignant etiology. The stippled and eccentric morphology of calcifications in apical lesions aids in differentiating these lesions from postinfectious scarring. Mucinous tumours can mimic a pulmonary abscess and small cell lung cancer can typically present as mediastinal mass without parenchymal abnormalities. Lung cancer presenting with a miliary pattern or cavitating nodules can mimic granulomatous disease. Lung cancer presenting with cystic airspaces and ‘emphysema-like’ morphology is an uncommon entity in which early recognition is crucial since these tumors have an aggressive nature. Key imaging findings and tips and tricks for recognizing these uncommon faces of primary lung cancer will be discussed and illustrated.
Conclusion:
Primary lung cancer can mimic a wide variety of benign entities. Knowledge of these uncommon and atypical manifestations is crucial to avoid delay in diagnosis and treatment. A multidisciplinary approach in these cases is mandatory.
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- Abstract
Background:
The aim of this study was to establish a mathematic model to predict the likelihood of lung cancer in surgically resected solitary pulmonary nodules (SPNs) and investigate the value of multidisciplinary treatment (MDT) consultation in diagnosis of SPNs.
Methods:
From January 2011 to June 2016, 666 patients with a clear pathological diagnosis of SPN by surgical resection in Fujian Provicial Cancer Hospital were involved. Their clinicopathologic data were collected and retrospectively analyzed. All patients were divided into testing and validating cohorts,testing cohort consisted of patients from January 2011 to June 2015, whose data were used to create a mathematical model via multivariate logistic regression analysis. Patients from July 2015 to June 2016 were included in validating cohort, whose data were used to verify the accuracy of the prediction model. The positive rate of malignancy between cases discussed at MDT meeting and evaluated by surgeon were compared.
Results:
The number of testing and validating cohorts was 446 and 220, respectively. In testing cohort, there were 8 case (1.8%) diagnosed as atypical adenohyperplasia (AAH) and 313 cases (70.2%) as malignant SPNs, mainly invasive adenocarcinoma (IA, 234 cases/ 52.5%), small cell lung cancer (SCLC, 28 cases/6.3%), minimally invasive adenocarcinoma (MIA, 22 cases/4.9%) and adenocarcinoma in situ(AIS,10 cases/2.2%). Other were benign SPNs (125 cases, 28%), mainly including inflammation or fibrosis(95 cases, 21.3%), hamartoma (17 cases, 3.8%) and inflammatory pseudotumor (11 cases, 2.4%).Univariate analysis showed that there were significant differences between benign and malignant SPNs regarding age, sex, nodule type, maximum nodule diameter, CT value, nodule shape, spiculation, lobulation, pleural retraction sign, cavitation, bronchiole truncation and vascular convergence (P<0.05). Sex, age, nodule type, spiculation, vascular convergence, bronchiole truncation and nodule shape were identified as independent predictors of malignancy in multivariate logistic regression analysis.The area under curve (AUC) was 0.883 (95% CI, 0.885-0.915) in the model. An appropriate cut-off point was determined as P=0.77, sensitivity and specificity of the model was 77.6% and 80.0%, respectively. The positive rate of malignancy was 81.3%(104/128) in cases discussed at MDT meeting, comparing with 72.0% in all patients(P<0.05).The positive rate of malignancy reach to 90.4% in 97 patients with model predicting positive and discussed by MDT. The validation data set is on-going.
Conclusion:
The prediction model established in this study could be useful in assessing the likelihood of lung cancer in SPNs. And MDT consultation can improve the accuracy of prediction.
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P1.03-030 - FDG-PET/CT Might Be a Predictor for Residual Disease in Advanced NSCLC after Chemoradiotherapy (ID 6299)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Sawada, K. Kondo, M. Tsuboi, N. Kawakita, K. Kajiura, H. Toba, Y. Kawakami, M. Yoshida, H. Takizawa, A. Tangoku
- Abstract
Background:
The standard treatment for locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is chemoradiotherapy (CRT), some patients are considered for trimodality therapy represented by concurrent CRT followed by surgical resection. However, there is no validated clinical predictor for surgical resection after CRT. In the present study, we analyzed that the correlation between SUVmax of FDG-PET/CT in pre/post CRT and treatment effect.
Methods:
22 patients with advanced NSCLC underwent CRT in Tokushima University Hospital between February 2006 to March 2016. we reviewed the medical records of 22 patients to obtain information on age, gender, histological type, clinical stage, adverse events, reduction ratio of tumor, SUVmax of FDG-PET/CT in pre/post CRT. Radiographic response was assessed by Modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) criteria. Toxicities were assessed according to the National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria (NCI-CTCAE).
Results:
Patient characteristics were as follows: average age of 65; male/female: 21/1, histologic type adenocarcinoma/squamous cell carcinoma/other: 14/5/3; clinical stage IB/IIB/IIIA: 1/3/18. Chemotherapy were platinum doublets regimen in almost cases. The average amounts of radiotherapy were 42Gy. The response rate was 29%. The number of PR/SD were 10/22 in RECIST. The adverse events were following: G2;11(50%), G3;8(36%), G4;5(23%). 2cases stopped treatment because of adverse events. Operative procedure were followings: lobectomy/bilobectomy/pneumonectomy: 17/2/3. The complication rate of operation was 27.2%, however, there was no hospital death. Overall survival was 69.7±10.3 months. Relapse free survival was 64.5±12.3 months. Pathological Complete Response(pCR) was recognized in 10cases(45.5%). The 4cases in 10cases of pCR got recurrence as distant metastasis, without local recurrence. The SUVmax decreasing rate was 69.8% in CRT. The SUVmax decreasing rate was 79% in the patients of pCR(n=5), however, this decreasing rate was 65% in not pCR(n=7, p=0.059). All cases of pCR indicated the SUVmax decreasing rate was more than 70%.
Conclusion:
The pCR were recognized in 10/22(45/5%) cases, underwent CRT. The treatment response in localregion was good in all cases. The SUVmax decreasing rate was more than 70% in all pCR cases.
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P1.03-031 - Gynecological Malignancies and Imaging Patterns. An Interesting Case Report and Literature Surveillance (ID 5508)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N. Alevizopoulos, V. Ntalapera, A. Dimitriadou, A. Skoula, T. Vagdatlis, K. Pissaki, N. Loukas, M. Vaslamatzis
- Abstract
Background:
Gynecologic malignancies are a heterogeneous group of common neoplasms in women. Thoracic abnormal findings exhibit various imaging patterns and are usually associated with locally invasive primary neoplasms with intra-abdominal spread. It is not rare, thoracic involvement occurring years post first diagnosis or as an isolated finding in patients without evidence of intra-abdominal neoplastic involvement. Thoracic metastases from gynecologic carcinomas typically manifest as pulmonary nodules and lymphadenopathy. Ovarian cancer often presents small pleural effusions and subtle pleural nodules whereas metastatic lung lesions, lymph nodes, and pleura are thought to present calcification or mimicking granulomatous disease. Metastases from fallopian tube carcinomas have imaging features identical to ovarian cancers. Most cervical cancers are of squamous histology, and while solid pulmonary metastases are more common, the cavitary metastatic lesions occur more often. Metastatic choriocarcinoma to lung characteristically exhibits solid pulmonary nodules. There are also reported pulmonary metastases from gynecologic malignancies with characteristic features such as cavitation (as awaited in squamous cell cervical cancer) and the "halo" sign (in hemorrhagic metastatic choriocarcinoma lesions) at computed tomography.
Methods:
We report a case with a mass in left paratracheal area invading the lung hinting primary lung cancer.
Results:
The patient ,female ,36 years old with previous medical history of resected cervical cancer , underwent endoscopy with aim to have trasnsbronchial aspiration but unfortunately the samples taken were consistent of inflammation infiltration. Thus she underwent thoracotomy due to high SUV (12) uptake points at PET CT with intention to exclude lung cancer. She had the mass removed with all the surrounding lung parenchyma but unfortunately the final histologic report documented metastatic infiltration from cervical cancer in competence with her previous medical history 6 years ago(Ib stage with radiotherapy only treated in adjuvant basis).She recovered well and was initiated chemotherapy for the gynecological malignancy stated She is now 2 years later alive, with no residual disease The basic is that malignancies are always suspected to be primary originated but the medical previous history should not be ignored ,even the imaging tests tend to resemble to other entities
Conclusion:
Therefore, radiologists should consider the presence of locoregional disease in combination with elevated tumor marker levels when interpreting imaging studies and all previous medical history of the patient’s malignancy to exclude metastatic disease.
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P1.03-032 - In vivo Imaging Models for Preclinical Screening of Molecular Targeted Drugs against Brain Metastasis (ID 4433)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Nishiyama, K. Kita, S. Arai, S. Takeuchi, T. Yamada, S. Yano
- Abstract
Background:
Background: Molecular targeted drugs are generally effective on tumors with driver oncogene, including EGFR, ALK, and NTRK1. However, patients with these oncogenes frequently experience progression of brain metastasis during the targeted drug treatment. Thus, it is essential to establish more effective treatment for controlling brain metastasis.
Methods:
Methods: We established in vivo imaging brain tumor models by intracranial inoculation of human cancer cell lines, such as lung adenocarcinoma H1975 cells with EGFR-L858R and T790M mutations, HGF-dependent gastric cancer NUGC4 cells, and TPM3-NTRK1-fusion gene positive colorectal cancer KM12SM cells, in SCID mice. We investigated the activity of several molecular targeted drugs on cell proliferation of these cell lines in vitro. In addition, we evaluated the efficacy of these drugs on brain tumor models, comparing with extracranial tumor models.
Results:
Results: In vitro conditions, H1975 cells were sensitive to the 3[rd] generation EGFR inhibitor, osimertinib. HGF stimulated proliferation of gastric cancer NUGC4 cells, and the HGF-induced proliferation was inhibited by crizotinib, which has anti-MET activity, in a dose-dependent manner. KM12SM cells, which are the highly liver metastatic variant derived from TPM3-NTRK1 fusion gene positive colon cancer KM12C cells. KM12SM were sensitive to TRK-A inhibitors, crizotinib and entrectinib. In H1975-cell in vivo models, osimertinib (25mg/kg) inhibited the progression of both brain tumors and subcutaneous tumors. In NUGC4-cell in vivo models, crizotinib (50mg/kg) delayed the progression of brain tumors as well as peritoneal carcinomatosis, and prolonged the survival of the tumor bearing mice. In KM12SM-cell in vivo models, we evaluated the effect of crizotinib (50mg/kg) or entrectinib (15mg/kg) in the brain tumor model and liver metastasis model. Crizotinib treatment slightly delayed the progression of brain tumors but failed to prolong the survival of the recipient mice. Entrectinib treatment more discernibly delayed the progression of brain tumors and did prolong the survival. These results indicate that the effect of targeted drugs against brain tumors can be different from that against extracranial tumors.
Conclusion:
Conclusion: Our in vivo imaging brain tumor models may be useful for preclinical drug screening against brain metastasis.
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P1.03-033 - Analysis of T0 Lung-RADS Scores in UI Health's Minority-Based Lung Cancer Screening Program and Comparison to the NLST (ID 4496)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Pasquinelli, K. Kovitz, J. Alban, L. Liu, A.Z. Dudek, R. Winn, K. Watson, M.G. Menchaca, M. Koshy, A. Plumb, L.E. Feldman
- Abstract
Background:
Lung Cancer (LC) is the leading cause of cancer death in the U.S. The incidence and mortality rate differs depending on smoking status, race, ethnicity, gender, and socioeconomic status (SES). African Americans (AA) have significantly higher incidence/mortality rates of LC. The National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) which showed a 20% reduction in LC mortality with low-dose CT (LDCT) screening only included 4.5% AA’s. LDCT screening amongst high risk minority individuals has not been sufficiently investigated. The goals of this study are: (1) to compare UI Health’s Screened Population (UIHSP) to the NLST and determine if NLST results are generalizable to an urban minority population; (2) to determine trends in UIHSP Lung-RADS based on age, gender, race/ethnicity, smoking-history, and comorbidities.
Methods:
Patients were referred to LDCT based on U.S. Preventative Services Task Force guidelines. Summary statistics, such as means, standard deviations, and ranges for continuous variables, and frequencies for categorical variables are provided. Spearman correlation coefficients are estimated between continuous variables (i.e., age, smoking pack-years) and Lung-RADS scores are estimated. Chi-squared tests and Fisher’s Exact tests were performed to test the associations between categorical variables and Lung-RADS scores. All statistical tests are two-sided, controlling for a Type I error probability of 0.05.
Results:
Compared to the NLST, UIHSP has a higher percentage of AA’s (65% vs. 4.5%), rate of Lung-RADS 3 and 4, (30% vs 13.7%). UIHSP had a LC rate 3x that of NLST on T0 scan (3% vs 1%). A diagnosis of emphysema on LDCT scans was significantly associated with higher Lung-RADS scores (p = 0.0415). Patients who were diagnosed with emphysema detected on LDCT report had significantly higher Lung-RADS scores. 5 LC diagnoses in the first 163 T0-scans (3%), 4 of 5 were AAs. Males were more likely to have Lung-RADS 3 and 4 than females (OR=2.1, p=0.0353). Smoking-pack years demonstrated a positive correlation with higher Lung-RADS score (p=0.067).
Conclusion:
UIHSP compared to NLST demonstrated higher incidence of Lung-RADS 3 and 4 scores and diagnosis of LC at T0 LDCT scans. In addition this study has found a significant association between emphysema and higher Lung-RADS scores among UIHSP. These results support the conclusion from previous studies that emphysema on LDCT is an independent risk factor for LC. Furthermore, the results show a statistically significant correlation between gender and Lung-RADS scores. These statistical associations make the case for the modification of USPSTF guidelines to fit the risk-profile of minority populations like UIHSP.
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P1.03-034 - Implementing Smartphone Application in Early Lung Cancer Detection and Screening (ID 4833)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): Z. Szanto, G. Szalai, L. Jakab, A. Vereczkei
- Abstract
Background:
The early detection of NSCLC cases is still the key point of the surgical treatment of lung cancer. Finding the symptomless patients require the system of risk assessment, risk group selection and a controlled screening. The modern communication path of the mobile devices are enabling us a complete new communication and selection method wich can effectively simplify the risk group identification and the suggestion of screening by the Screening Centers. The aim of our study was to determine the effectivity of a lung cancer risk assessment mobile application (LungScreen) in a localised setting.
Methods:
A freely downloadable lung cancer risk assessment application (LungScreen) were created for Android and iOS mobile platforms. The application calculates and shows individual NSCLC risk based on Bach's protocol after collecting demographic data, smoking status, possible environmental harms of the participant. Based on GPS coordinates the high risk participant is navigated to the nearest Screening Center for further investigation. We analysed the records of the application in a test period of one year aided by an informative campaign in Hungary.
Results:
In one year test period more than 70000 participants downloaded and completed the risk assessment test (Male/Female 58%/42%, Age range 9-92 years,mean age 38,2 year). 14238 participants were active smokers, high risk criteria was calculated in 1831 cases, in which further screening investigation were suggested. In our region (Baranya County) 158 LDCT screening were performed, with 32 positive findings wich required further investigations. In 9 cases Tumor Board decided to indicate surgery (7 cases NSCLC, 2 cases benign lesion). All the procedures were performed with VATS. 8028 tests from 28 other countries (e.g. Germany, France, UK, USA, Japan etc)
Conclusion:
Lung cancer risk assessment via mobile devices allows free, fast and efficient way to select, manage and localize high risk population for NSCLC. By omitting the complex recruitment process it can effectively fasten the screening trials and subsequently lower the financial needs. Giving immediate personalised feedback and individual direction to diagnostic centers can facilitate early diagnosis of operable NSCLC cases.
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P1.03-035 - Does Screening with Low-Dose Computed Tomography (LDCT) of Asbestos Exposed Subjects Reduce Mortality for Lung Cancer (LC)? (ID 5586)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): G. Fasola, O. Belvedere, F. Barbone, A. Follador, F. Barbiero, S. Rizzato, C. Rossetto, E. De Carlo, P. Cassetti, S. Meduri, F. Grossi
- Abstract
Background:
Our previous prospective non-randomized ATOM002 study showed that LDCT screening of asbestos exposed subjects can identify LC at an earlier, and potentially more curable, stage than chest radiographs (CXR) (Fasola et al, The Oncologist 2007). The ATOM002 participants were selected from subjects enrolled in a surveillance program for asbestos exposed workers at the Monfalcone Occupational Health Unit in the Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) region, Italy. Here, we report a cohort mortality study of asbestos exposed subjects from that surveillance program, comparing outcomes in the ATOM002 participants and contemporary nonparticipants.
Methods:
Within a cohort of 2,433 asbestos exposed subjects, we compared mortality between the ATOM study participants (who had additional baseline and 1 year LDCT) and nonparticipants (n=926 and 1,507, respectively). The follow-up period spanned the years 2002-2011. Cox models were performed to assess survival for all causes, all cancers, LC and malignant pleural mesothelioma. Final models estimating mortality hazard ratios (HR) were adjusted for smoking habits, age, level of asbestos exposure and Charlson-Quan comorbidity index. For external comparison, we estimated the standardized mortality rate ratio (SMR) using FVG regional standard rates.
Results:
There was a significant 59.3% (95%CI: 3.9-82.8) reduction in adjusted mortality for LC among ATOM002 participants vs. nonparticipants. LC crude mortality was 99.4 per 100,000 person-year in participants (8 LC deaths) compared to 430.4 per 100,000 person-year in nonparticipants (50 LC deaths). Mortality was also reduced for all causes (HR=0.61; 95%CI 0.44-0.84), but not for all cancers (HR=0.97; 95%CI 0.62-1.50) or malignant pleural mesothelioma (HR=0.86; 95%CI 0.31-2.41). Compared with regional mortality rates, a trend towards reduced mortality for LC was found among ATOM002 participants (SMR =0.55; 95%CI 0.24-1.09), in contrast to a statistically significant increase in the nonparticipants (SMR = 2.07; 95%CI 1.53-2.73).
Conclusion:
In our cohort, participation in the LDCT based screening study was associated with reduced mortality for LC compared to empiric CXR based public health surveillance. To our knowledge, this is the first report suggesting reduction in mortality for LC with LDCT screening in an asbestos exposed population. LDCT screening might therefore be a reasonable approach for surveillance in these populations.
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P1.03-036 - Adherence to Eligibility Criteria for Low-Dose CT Screening in an Academic Center (ID 4957)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.C. Bloom, S. Greenlee, D. Madtes, M.A. Greenwood-Hickman, S.D. Ramsey, B. Goulart
- Abstract
Background:
The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommend low dose computed tomography (LDCT) lung cancer screening for high risk patients, defined as those between age 55-77 (CMS) or 55-80 (USPSTF), with ≥30 pack-year smoking history who currently smoke or quit within the past 15 years. The NCCN guidelines also recommend screening for patients over 50 years with ≥20 pack-year smoking history and at least one additional lung cancer risk factor. To better understand community practices, we describe adherence to screening eligibility criteria for the population screened at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA).
Methods:
The SCCA developed a multidisciplinary LDCT screening program that executes LDCT screening orders when patients’ regional primary care providers deem them eligible for screening, and provides follow-up evaluations based on screening results. From a prospective registry study of patients screened at the SCCA, we collected baseline sociodemographic, smoking history, and clinical data to retroactively assess patients’ screening eligibility based on USPSTF, CMS, and NCCN criteria, respectively. We define adherence as the proportion of patients meeting at least 1 set of guidelines criteria for screening and used univariate logistic regression to identify potential sociodemographic predictors of adherence, excluding age and smoking history.
Results:
Of 252 patients screened between 5/8/2012 and 8/19/2015, 111 (44%) consented to participate in the study. Median age was 63, 67% were male, 89% were white, 99% were insured, median household income was $75,000, 56% were current smokers, and median cigarette use was 36 pack-years. Of 106 patients with complete eligibility data, 61 (58%), 60 (57%), and 60 (57%) met the USPSTF, CMS, and NCCN screening criteria, respectively. Seventy-nine (75%) patients met eligibility criteria for at least one guideline. Of the 27 patients ineligible by any guidelines, 17 (63%) had <20 pack-years smoking history and 5 (19%) were under age 50. White patients were more likely to meet eligibility for at least one guideline (Odds Ratio= 7.3; 95% CI = 1.9-27.8).
Conclusion:
In this single-center registry study, 25% of patients did not meet screening eligibility criteria when primary care providers were responsible for identifying screening candidates. In response to these results, the program employed a coordinator to pro-actively review screening orders to confirm guideline compliance. An opportunity exists to prioritize LDCT screening to high risk patients through patient counseling, provider education and pro-active review of screening CT orders.
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P1.03-037 - Radio-Guided Localization and Resection of Small or Ill-Defined Pulmonary Lesions (ID 6224)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Galetta, L. Spaggiari
- Abstract
Background:
Screening programs increased identification of small or indistinct pulmonary lesions which are difficult to localize. We report our experience in their preoperative localization by radiotracer and resection.
Methods:
Patients with pulmonary nodule of subsolid morphology or smaller than 1 cm and/or deeper 1 cm below the visceral pleura underwent computer-tomography (CT)-guided injection of radiotracer technetium99m macroaggregates in vicinity of the lesion. During surgery, a handheld gamma probe was used to detect hot spot where radioactive was localized and this area was resected.
Results:
From November 2007 to December 2013, 112 patients (58 men; median age 62 years) underwent preoperative radiotracer injection with a successful marking in all patients. Complications included 33 pneumothoraces (29.4%) (one requiring chest tube placement), 23 (20.5%) parenchymal hemorrhage soffusions, and 1 (0.9%) allergic reaction to contrast medium. In all cases, except for 2, gamma probe revealed pulmonary lesion. Overall, 123 pulmonary nodules were localized and resected. Mean distance from the pleura was 12 mm (range, 0 to 39 mm). Pulmonary resection was performed by thoracoscopy in 70 (62.5%) cases, thoracotomy in 36 (32.1%), and converted thoracoscopy to thoracotomy in 6 (5.4%). Mean nodule size was 9 mm (range, 3-24 mm). Histology showed 14 (11.4%) benign lesions and 109 (88.6%) malignant lesions (85 primary lung cancers, and 24 metastases).
Conclusion:
Radiotracer localization of pulmonary lesions is a simple and feasible procedure with a high rate of success. Optimal candidates are patients with suspicious nodules detected by screening or incidental CT due to high rate of nonsolid morphology and small size.
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P1.03-038 - Appropriateness of Lung Cancer Screening with Low Dose Computed Tomography (ID 5647)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L.M. Henderson, L.M. Jones, T. Benefield, D. Reuland, A. Brenner, P. Molina, M.P. Rivera
- Abstract
Background:
Based on results of the National Lung Screening Trial, several expert U.S. groups now recommend lung cancer screening (LCS) with annual low-dose computed tomography (LDCT). The extent to which LCS is performed according to guidelines is unknown. We evaluated the appropriateness of LCS performed at a US academic medical center.
Methods:
Chart abstractions were performed for all patients (N=174) undergoing LCS at an academic medical center between 2/5/2015 and 4/30/2016. During the data collection period, an active quality improvement (QI) project, aimed at improving appropriate implementation of LCS, was underway in the internal medicine (IM) department. Appropriate screening was defined as: 1) patient age 55-77 years; 2) smoking history of 30+ pack-years; 3) current smoker or quit less than 16 years ago; 4) asymptomatic for lung cancer; 5) not on daytime oxygen; 6) documentation of shared decision making (SDM); 7) no severe COPD; and 8) no heart failure. We evaluated characteristics associated with LCS using multivariate logistic regression and report odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI).
Results:
The study population was between 44 and 85 years, was 68% white, 28% black, and 4% other race, and the majority (56%) were male. Fifty-six percent of patients were former smokers, and most (83%) had smoked at least 30 pack-years. The majority of screenings were ordered by family medicine and IM practitioners. Seventy percent of screenings were classified as inappropriate. The most frequent reasons for inappropriate screening were: inadequate or no SDM documentation (47%), patient being symptomatic (19%), too low or missing pack-year data (17%), patient quit smoking more than 15 years ago (13%), and having severe COPD (13%). Thirty-five percent were classified as inappropriate based on two or more criteria. The proportion appropriately screened increased from 10% during the first third of 2015 to 34% in the first third of 2016. After adjusting for patient race and sex, predictors of appropriate screening were having the order from an IM versus family medicine provider (OR=3.8, 95%CI:1.5-9.6) and having a more recent order date (order from first third of 2016 versus the first third of 2015 (OR=5.4, 95%CI:1.1-26.8)).
Conclusion:
Although a significant proportion of patients screened for lung cancer do not meet U.S. appropriate eligibility criteria, this is improving. The QI project in the IM clinic addressed key factors affecting implementation of LCS, such as collection of complete smoking history and training of nurses and providers, resulting in improvements to the rate of appropriate LCS.
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- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer (LC) screening is not recommended for low-risk subjects, including never smokers. However, LDCT is often performed in Korea as a part of cancer screening program even for healthy female never smokers (FNS). To examine the role of LDCT screening in FNS, we estimated the risk of subsequent development of LC according to their initial LDCT findings and age groups.
Methods:
This retrospective cohort study included FNS aged 40 to 79 years who performed initial LDCT from Aug 2002 to Dec 2007. Lung cancer diagnosis was identified from the Korea Central Cancer Registry Database (Dec 2013) and vital status (Dec 2014) from Statistics Korea. LDCT findings were reviewed using Lung Imaging Reporting and Data System (Lung-RADS). LC risk and outcomes were analyzed according to initial LDCT findings and age groups using the national data up to 12 years after the LDCT. .
Results:
There were 4,365 FNS with mean age of 51.1±7.6 years (median F/U time = 9.7 years). Overall, twenty-two LCs (0.5%) were identified with an incidence rate of 52.58 (95% CI 34.62-79.86) per 100,000 person-years. The incidence rates were 8.53 (2.75-26.44), 75.16 (24.24-233.04), 0 and 1665.58 (1020.38-2718.72) in subjects with category 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. The cumulative incidence is shown in Fig 1. The incidence rates were 35.30 (95% CI 18.99-65.00) and 88.84 (50.45-156.44) in age with 40~54 years and 55~79, respectively. Three women among 16 classified into category 4 died of LC, while no death in those with category 1 , 2, or 3 [median time to LC diagnosis= 5.1 years (range, 2.8-8.8)]. Fig 1. Cumulative incidence of lung cancer according to lung-RADS Figure 1
Conclusion:
Although, the effectiveness of lung cancer screening is in FNS still unclear, repeat LDCT seems to be unnecessary in those with category 1, 2 and 3, at least within 5 years after initial LDCT.
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P1.03-040 - Beliefs Surrounding Lung Cancer Screening among Physicians and Lay Populations: Results from the EDIFICE Survey (ID 4436)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A.B. Cortot, S. Couraud, F. Eisinger, C. Touboul, J. Blay, J. Viguier, C. Lhomel, X. Pivot, J. Morere, L. Greillier
- Abstract
Background:
The National Lung Cancer Screening Trial has shown that lung cancer screening (LCS) with an annual low-dose chest CT-scan reduces specific mortality in both former and current heavy smokers. However, organizational issues have yet to be solved before it can be systematically implemented. We investigated the perceptions of the population at large as well as those of physicians with regard to the efficacy of LCS, and target populations in terms of tobacco use.
Methods:
The 4th French nationwide observational survey, EDIFICE 4, was conducted by phone interviews of a representative sample of 1602 subjects, aged between 40 and 75 years, from June 12 to July 10, 2014. A mirror survey was also conducted by phone among physicians between July 9 and August 8, 2014. Both surveys were conducted using the quota method on representative samples of 1463 lay persons and 301 physicians with no history of cancer.
Results:
For 53% of lay persons and 33% of physicians interviewed (P<0.01), generalization of LCS is potentially an effective way to reduce lung cancer mortality. For the majority of interviewees (58% of lay persons and 55% of physicians; difference not statistically significant [NS]), offering LCS to the whole population would not encourage smokers to continue smoking. The table shows lay persons’ and physicians’ replies concerning possible target populations within the whole population and among smokers. Figure 1
Conclusion:
Lay persons are more inclined to suggest generalizing LCS to the whole population, independently of current smoking status or quitting issues. Lay persons and physicians alike agree with generalizing LCS to all smokers, regardless of their tobacco consumption.
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P1.03-041 - Do Several Rounds of Negative Screening Low Dose CT Scans Influence the Risk to Develop Lung Cancer? (ID 5373)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): H.C. Schmidt, J. Kavanagh, G. Liu, M.S. Tsao, F. Shepherd
- Abstract
Background:
The purpose of this study was to assess whether several years of negative screening low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) scans predict a subsequent lower risk of developing lung cancer. This would have implications for recommended intervals and duration of LDCT lung cancer screening.
Methods:
The cohort was an at-risk population who had previous negative screening LDCTs and had not been screened for at least 5 years. Between 2003 and 2009, 4782 individuals had been enrolled in a lung cancer screening study based on age and smoking alone. At this time, their risk was re-calculated using a multifactorial assessment model, and they were contacted in decreasing order of their re-calculated risk. An initial phone interview assessed interim history, general health, interim diagnosis of lung cancer or interim chest CT. Those participants without lung cancer or recent CT were invited for a single LDCT (40mA, 135kV, 1mm axial reconstructions). Subsequent investigation was recommended depending on the LDCT findings: negative, no new or growing nodules (no further recommendation), positive, low suspicion for malignancy (follow up CT in 3-6 months) or positive, high suspicion for malignancy (referral to the local lung cancer rapid diagnostic assessment program).
Results:
To date, 361 individuals or family members have been contacted. Fifty-five individuals had passed away (20 from lung cancer), 24 were alive with lung cancer. 129 did not qualify for a LDCT scan (declined participation, or recent CT). A total of 153 have attended for LDCT, on average 7 years after their last LDCT. Ninety-one (59%) studies were reported as negative. Fourty-five (29%) LDCTs were positive with low suspicion and a follow up scan was recommended; in 13 cases nodules had resolved on follow up imaging, the remaining 32 are awaiting surveillance LDCTs. Seventeen (11%) LDCTs were reported as positive with high suspicion; 11 of those have a subsequently biopsy proven lung cancer and 6 are currently undergoing further investigations or LDCT surveillance. All lung cancers diagnosed were either stage I or II. Of the 11 individuals with biopsy proven cancers, 7 had normal previous CTs, 4 had a pre-existing groundglass nodules in the tumor location on the most recent exam. The overall prevalence of lung cancer in this cohort is 15.2% (55/361) and it may increase. The detection rate of LDCT to date is 7.2% (11/153).
Conclusion:
Lung cancer risk remains high despite several negative annual screening LDCT scans. Continued screening beyond three years is recommended in high risk individuals.
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P1.03-042 - Nodule Size is Poorly Represented by Nodule Diameter in Low-Dose CT Lung Cancer Screening (ID 6009)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.A. Heuvelmans, R. Vliegenthart, P.M.A. Van Ooijen, H.J. De Koning, M. Oudkerk
- Abstract
Background:
In lung cancer screening, at least one pulmonary nodule is found in over 50% of participants, of which 99% is benign. As lung cancer probability in low-dose computed tomography (CT) lung cancer screening usually is based on nodule size and growth rate, accurate nodule size determination is of major importance to decrease false positive screen results. Previous studies showed that nodule size measurements based on semi-automated volume are preferred over diameter measurements. Aim of this study was to determine the correlation between nodule diameter and nodule size of nodules found in low-dose CT lung cancer screening, and to directly compare it with semi-automated volume measurements.
Methods:
We investigated baseline data of 2,240 solid nodules of intermediate size (volume 50-500mm[3]) in 1,500 lung cancer screening participants. Nodule volume, x, y, and z diameter and minimum / maximum diameter in any direction were generated by semi-automated software (LungCARE, Siemens). Range in maximum axial and mean nodule diameter per nodule volume category (50-100mm[3], 100-200mm[3], 200-300mm[3], 300-400mm[3], 400-500mm[3]) was determined. Semi-automated nodule volume represented nodule size. Intra-nodule diameter variation was defined as maximum minus minimum nodule diameter.
Results:
Median participant age was 59 years, 14.1% were women. Median nodule volume was 82.4 mm[3] (interquartile range [IQR], 62.9–125.4 mm[3]). Median nodule diameter was 6.1 mm (IQR, 5.4–7.2 mm) for mean diameter, and 6.6 mm (IQR, 5.9–7.7 mm) for maximum axial diameter. Range in mean nodule diameter per volume category varied from 8.55 mm (3.0 – 11.5 mm) for nodules with volume of 50-100 mm[3] to 6.1 mm (7.2 – 13.3 mm) for nodules with volume of 200-300 mm[3]; range in maximum axial diameter varied from 11.2 mm (7.3 – 18.5 mm) for nodules with volume of 200-300 mm[3], to 7.0 mm (9.1 – 16.1 mm) for nodules with volume of 400-500 mm[3]. Intra-nodule diameters varied by a median of 2.8 mm (IQR, 2.2-3.7 mm). Intra-nodule diameter variation for smaller intermediate-sized nodules (50-200 mm[3]) was 2.8 mm (IQR 2.2-3.5 mm), and was smaller than intra-nodule diameter variation for larger intermediate-sized nodules (200-500 mm[3]; median 3.6 mm [IQR 2.5-5.1 mm], P<0.01).
Conclusion:
Nodule size is poorly represented by diameter, as a nodule has an infinite number of diameters, but only one volume. Therefore, use of nodule diameter measurements may lead to misclassification of lung cancer probability. Median intra-nodule diameter variation was found to be higher as the 1.5mm LungRADS cutoff for nodule growth.
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P1.03-043 - Practical Difficulty of Low Dose Computerized Tomography as a Lung Cancer Screening Tool in an Endemic Area of Tuberculosis (ID 5849)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): N. Triphuridet, S. Singharuksa, S. Vidhyakorn
- Abstract
Background:
Low-dose computerized tomography (LDCT) is a current standard technique for lung cancer screening to reduce lung cancer death. Clinical and radiographic finding for lung cancer can also be found in Tuberculosis(TB). No clear evidence of benefits from lung cancer screening has been established in a high-risk population residing in an endemic area of TB.
Methods:
A 5-year prospective lung cancer screening using LDCT enrolled 634 former or current heavy smokers (>30 pack-years) aged 50-70 years without a history of active TB within a recent year between July 2012 and January 2014 at Chulabhorn Hospital in Thailand. The results were classified as negative, indeterminate, or positive for primary lung cancer. The preliminary data demonstrated from three rounds of low-dose CT screening for lung cancer (rounds T0, T1, and T2).
Results:
At initial screening LDCT, 3.5% had positive test (solid/part solid nodule>10·0 mm/volume >500 mm[3] or consolidation, obstructive atelectasis, pleural effusion, or mediastinal lymphadenopathy). Most of participants with non calcified lung nodule(NCN)(s) had 2-4 nodules, the higher proportion of multiple pulmonary nodules was observed in the larger size. Nine cases(1.4%) were proven lung cancer (56% stage I, 22% stage II/III, 22% stage IV) within 12 months. All cases of stage I-II had 2-10 lung nodules, while all stage III- IV lung cancers had single lung nodule. PPV of positive LDCT test, NCN(s)>10 mm and GGN(s)>10 mm for diagnosis lung cancer were 27.3%, 40%, and 75%, respectively. The incidence of lung cancer in T1 and T2 were 0.67% and 0.70%, respectively. Half of them had baseline lesions suspected inflammation/infection. The incidence of active pulmonary TB in T1 and T2 was 0.50% and 0.52%, respectively.
Conclusion:
Despite a high burden of TB in Thailand, LDCT screening in heavy smokers could yield a high rate of early stage of primary lung cancer in this population at risk and also high rate of active pulmonary tuberculosis. However, high prevalence of lung nodules and high proportion of multiple pulmonary nodules of individuals were major problems in diagnosis and staging lung cancer in endemic area of Tuberculosis. Regarding the high probability of malignancy in GGN diameter >10 mm and newly seen or progressive lesion of baseline lesion suspected of inflammation/infection, nodule management protocol would be adapted in this population.
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P1.03-044 - EUS-Guided Sampling of Mediastinal Lymph Nodes and Abdominal Lesions in Lung Cancer (ID 5147)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Hida, Y. Oya, K. Tanaka, H. Furuta, N. Watanabe, T. Yoshida, J. Shimizu, Y. Horio, K. Hara, Y. Yatabe
- Abstract
Background:
Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS–TBNA) was introduced to provide access to mediastinal and hilar lymph nodes. However, it is difficult to use EBUS to approach the aortopulmonary window and paraesophagaeal stations. Transesophageal endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) was introduced to provide access to this area. In addition, transgastroduodenal endoscopic ultrasound can evaluate abdominal lesions.
Methods:
Endoscopic ultrasound fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) was performed under conscious sedation with the administration of intravenous midazolam and pethidine hydrochloride. It was performed with a convex array echoendoscope connected to an ultrasound scanning system. Lymph nodes of paraesophageal, subcarinal, lower paratracheal, subaortic, and upper paratracheal regions were evaluated from esophagus. Left adrenal gland and right adrenal gland were evaluated from stomach and duodenum, respectively. Abdominal lesions were also evaluated from stomach and duodenum. After obtaining tissue via EUS-FNA, the tissue was reviewed immediately (rapid on-site cytopathological evaluation: ROSE) by a cytopathologist. Subsequent punctures in the same patient were not performed before confirming the results of ROSE so as to minimize the complications.
Results:
As to the lymph node level, the lower mediastinum and the aortopulmonary window are particularly important for detection by transesophageal EUS, whereas pretracheal and hilar lymph nodes are out of reach because of the interposition of air from the trachea and bronchi. EUS was chosen to assess the posterior mediastinum nodes (#5, 7, 8, or 9) but not the anterior ones. A final diagnosis was obtained by EUS-FNA in 76 patients. The lesions sampled were mediastinal lymph nodes (n=64; #5, 7, 8, or 9), abdominal lymph nodes (n=8), and adrenal gland (n=4).
Conclusion:
Repeat tumor biopsies from patients with acquired resistance were initially obtained through research efforts to ascertain mechanisms of resistance, but are now recommended to help select second-line therapies. However, such biopsies are associated with both risk and discomfort and may not always supply enough tumor tissue for genetic analyses. Although EUS–FNA does not provide access to pretracheal and hilar lymph nodes, EUS-FNA is an accurate, safe, and minimally invasive modality for evaluating mediastinal lymphadenopathy and abdominal lesions in patients suspected of having lung metastases.
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P1.03-045 - Screening for Lung Cancer with Early CDT-Lung Blood Biomarkers and Computed Tomography (ID 6148)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Jett, D. Dyer, J. Kern, D. Rollins, M. Phillips, J.H. Finigan
- Abstract
Background:
The Early Cancer Detection Test (CDT)-Lung is a serum-based biomarker consisting of a panel of tumor-associated autoantibodies that has been shown to detect lung cancer. We hypothesized that this biomarker when used in combination with a low-dose CT (LDCT) in screening of an at-risk population would increase the detection of early stage lung cancer.
Methods:
A prospective study of 1,600 subjects at high risk for lung cancer was designed. Eligibility criteria included persons 50-75 years of age, current or former smokers of ≥ 20 pack years and ˂ 10 years since quit smoking. Those with a history of lung cancer in first-degree relative(s) and any history of smoking were included. Exclusion criteria were any history of cancer within 10 years (except skin cancer), any use of oxygen, and life expectancy of < 5 years. Those fitting inclusion criteria received the Early CDT-Lung blood test and a LDCT. A nodule of ≥ 3mm was considered as a positive scan. The Early CDT-Lung test was considered positive if any one of the seven autoantibodies was positive. Telephonic follow-up was conducted over two years.
Results:
From May 2012 through June 2016, 1235 individuals were enrolled. The cohort median age was 59 years with 55% female and 45% male gender distribution. Fifty-two per cent were current smokers while 48% were former smokers. Seventy-one per cent of the LDCTs were negative for any lung nodule while 29% were positive. The Early CDT-Lung biomarker was positive in 88 (7%) of participants. In those with a positive LDCT (n=352), the biomarker was positive in 30 (8.5%). As of June 30, 2015, there have been seven confirmed lung cancers: two limited stage small cell, two Stage IB adenocarcinoma (ACA), and three Stage IA (two ACA and one squamous cell). The Early CDT-Lung blood test was positive in 2 of the 7 (29%) total cancers, both stage 1A. Early CDT-Lung was positive in 2 of 5 (40%) Stage IA/B lung cancers in total. Early CDT-Lung was negative in the two small cell cancers. There are 58 Early CDT-Lung biomarker positive individuals with a LDCT without nodules. (NCT01700257)
Conclusion:
The Early CDT-Lung biomarker was more likely to be positive in patients with nodules and lung cancer cases, particularly early stage lung cancer. Accrual to the study and follow-up of 58 biomarker positive but LDCT negative participants continues.
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P1.03-046 - Selection of Subjects at High-Risk for LDCT Lung Cancer Screening Using a Molecular Panel: Results by the ITALUNG Biomarker Study (ID 4279)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): F.M. Carozzi, L. Carrozzi, F. Falaschi, A. Lopes Pegna, M. Mascalchi, G. Picozzi, F. Pistelli, F. Aquilini, C. Ocello, L. Greco, C. Sani, M. Peluso, S. Bisanzi, E. Paci
- Abstract
Background:
Low Dose Computer Tomography (LDCT) screening has been shown effective in reducing overall and lung cancer mortality, but there are still concerns for efficiency and the cost/harm benefit ratio.reduce costs. Subjects enrolled in trials evaluating LCDT as a test for the early detection of lung cancer represent the ideal population in which to study the possible use of molecular markers in a combined approach of screening.
Methods:
Out of 1406 subjects randomised in the intervention arm of the ITALUNG study and attending at baseline test, 1356 were enrolled, after specific consent, in the ITALUNG biomarker study. Screen detected lung cancers detected over the 4-years of screening (N=36 out of 38 in ITALUNG active arm) and 481 randomly selected subjects without lung cancer at end of the study follow up, were included in this analysis . DNA in plasma was quantified at baseline by Real Time PCR; microsatellite instability (MSI) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was assessed in blood and sputum. ITALUNG Biomarker Panel (IBP) was considered as positive if MSI /LOH and/or DNA Plasma values (cutoff 5 ng / ml) were positive.
Results:
The IBP results are shown in Table 1. Accuracy measure were estimated and showed high sensitivity for baseline screen-detected cases (94.4%) with a specificity of 60.0% (ROC Area:77%). Sensitivity and specificity were 66.7% and 60.1% for lung cancers screen detected at repeated LDCT (ROC Area: 63.4%). Figure 1
Conclusion:
The IBP showed good accuracy for the identification of screen detected baseline lung cancers, with a very high sensitivity and a specificity of about 60%. The analysis of IBP of the baseline sample showed low prediction at repeated test. IBP was confirmed as a potentially valid tool for baseline selection of high-risk subjects, saving about the 60% of the tests. Low predictive capacity of screen detected cases at repeated tests needs further investigation.
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P1.03-047 - Community-Based Low-Dose Computed Tomography (LDCT) Lung Cancer Screening in the US Histoplasmosis Belt: One Year Followup (ID 6093)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): E. Porubcin, J. Howell, S.A. Cremer
- Abstract
Background:
LDCT lung cancer screening has been incorporated into most major American medical societies' screening guidelines. However, its performance in a non-tertiary care community setting with a high prevalence of fungal infections has not been sufficiently studied.
Methods:
Beginning in April 2013, high-risk adults ages 55-80 with at least a 30 pack-year smoking history, including former smokers who had quit within the previous 15 years, were prospectively evaluated with an LDCT scan performed at our community hospital (UnityPoint Health Medical Center in Quad Cities, Illinois). Standard National Lung Screening Trial exclusion criteria were followed with minor modifications. All participants’ scans were evaluated using Lung-RADS version 1.0 assessment categories. An oncology nurse navigator contacted and monitored all participants. CTs were interpreted by a local radiology group, with two radiologists spearheading the program and ensuring consistent interpretations.
Results:
As of June 2016, we present data on 466 evaluable participants (compared to 176 from one year ago), 234 of whom were men (50%). The median age of the studied population remains 64 years (range 55-80). Screening adherence has dropped from 97% to 91%, with 40 participants lost to followup. 27 participants have completed all required phases of the screening. 192 participants (41%) had positive baseline screening tests. 26 of those participants (6% of the total population) required further evaluation with PET scans. 15 of these PET scans were followed by invasive procedures, including lung biopsy. 13 biopsy-proven malignancies (3%) were detected as a direct result of the screening. 12 malignancies were NSCLCs, of which 9 were early-stage (stages I-II). The thirteenth malignancy, a stage I Marginal Zone Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma of the lung, was confirmed by a lung wedge biopsy. Of the other two participants requiring invasive diagnostic procedure, one had a biopsy “negative for malignancy” and the other was diagnosed with histoplasmosis. No biopsy-related complications occurred. Twelve of thirteen participants with biopsy-proven malignancies are still alive and doing well. One participant died secondary to an advanced NSCLC detected by the screening program.
Conclusion:
This report represents an update on, to our knowledge, the first community hospital-based study evaluating the results of LDCT lung cancer screening in an area of the United States endemic for both histoplasmosis and blastomycosis. Only one case of histoplasmosis has been confirmed by invasive diagnostic procedure. A significant number of early stage lung cancers were detected without excessive testing or complications.
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P1.03-048 - A Structured Lung Cancer Screening Program Facilitates Patient and Provider Compliance (ID 5892)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Christensen, J. Garst, M. Wahidi, C. Hogan, H. Crittenden, S. Bruce, T. D'Amico, B.C. Tong
- Abstract
Background:
In the United States, both private insurers and Medicare provide coverage for low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening for lung cancer. Medicare has defined specific criteria for coverage to include “lung cancer screening counseling and shared decision making visit”[1]. Currently, in many institutions, it is possible for LDCT screening to be performed without documentation of these discussions. We hypothesize that performing LDCT screening in the context of a structured lung cancer screening program results in improved compliance with coverage regulations.
Methods:
Medical records of patients undergoing LDCT screening at our institution between January 1, 2015 and June 30, 2016 were reviewed. Chart abstraction included eligibility criteria and documentation of shared decision making, discussion of adherence to annual screening and discussion of tobacco cessation/continued abstinence.
Results:
Of the 591 patients who had LDCT screening in the defined time period, 223 (37.7%) were seen in the Lung Cancer Screening Clinic and 368 (62.3%) had studies ordered by other providers. Within the Lung Cancer Screening Clinic (LCSC) cohort, 202/223 (90.6%) met Medicare eligibility and 17/223 (7.6%) met National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) “Category 2” criteria for lung cancer screening. In the “other provider” (OP) cohort, 281 (76.4%) met Medicare eligibility and 24 (6.5%) met NCCN “Category 2” criteria for screening (p<0.0001). Current smokers were more likely to have documented discussion of tobacco cessation counseling (99.2% vs. 64.2%, respectively; p<0.0001). Similarly, patients seen in the LCSC were more likely to have documentation of shared decision making than those in the OP cohort (97.3% vs. 19.3%, respectively; p<0.0001).Table 1. Compliance with Medicare criteria for LDCT screening.
LCSC (n = 223) OP (n = 368) p-value Medicare-eligible for screening NCCN “Category 2” Do not meet criteria for lung cancer screening 202 (90.6%) 17 (7.6%) 4 (1.8%) 281 (76.4%) 25 (6.8%) 62 (16.8%) <0.0001 Former smoker, quit within 15 years Current smoker 99 (44.4%) 124 (55.6%) 181 (49.2%) 187 (51.8%) 0.2958 Documented Tobacco Cessation Counseling (current smokers) 123/124 (99.2%) 119/187 (63.6%) <0.0001 Mean time spent in tobacco cessation counseling 23 minutes 5 minutes 0.0075 Documentation of shared decision making 182/187 (97.3%) 68/353 (19.3%) <0.0001
Conclusion:
LDCT screening conducted in the context of a dedicated lung cancer screening clinic facilitates compliance with Medicare criteria and improves patient education and decision-making. Opportunities exist for those providing LDCT to improve the elements of patient education that are essential to LDCT screening. References 1. https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/details/nca-decision-memo.aspx?NCAId=274
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P1.03-049 - Smoking Patterns in a Predominantly African American Population Undergoing Lung Cancer Screening (ID 5984)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.P. Erkmen, S.R. Sferra, C. Goldman, L.R. Kaiser, V. Disesa, G.X. Ma
- Abstract
Background:
Patients within the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) undergoing low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) lung cancer screening (LCS) with abnormal results were more likely to quit smoking (Tammemagi et al.). However, these results may not be generalizable to underserved, ethnic minorities. Despite high incidence and mortality of smoking-related lung cancer among African Americans (AAs), few efficacy smoking cessation trials in the context of LDCT-LCS include a large representation of AAs. Thus, we studied smoking patterns in a predominantly AA population undergoing lung cancer screening.
Methods:
In a predominantly AA population we studied those undergoing LDCT-LCS (n=146). These patients received shared decision making, LDCT-LCS, results and smoking cessation in a single visit. Patients self-reported smoking status six months following LDCT.
Results:
Of 146 patients receiving lung cancer screening, 100 (68%) are AAs, 30 (21%) Caucasians, 14 (10%) Hispanics and 2 (1%) Asians. Smoking history was a mean of 49 pack years, median of 42 pack years with 60% current smokers. Of the 88 active smokers, 86 received greater than 10 minutes of smoking cessation counseling, 61 received a prescription for smoking cessation medications, and 60 agreed to follow up smoking cessation appointments. The overall quit rate was 11% (10 out of 88 active smokers). Quit rate for smokers who declined medical assistance was 4% (1 out of 28). Smokers who attended follow up visits in addition to receiving a personalized combination of smoking cessation medications had a quit rate of 33% (5 out of 15). Quit rate was 20% for people with normal LDCT, Lung-RADS category 1 (8 out of 40) and 5% for people with benign appearing nodules, Lung-RADS category 2 (2 out of 41). None of the 3 people with nodules requiring further follow up, Lung-RADS category 3, or the 4 people with nodules suspicious for cancer Lung-RADS category 4, quit smoking within 6 months of their LDCT.
Conclusion:
In a predominantly AA population, 60% of screened LDCT-LCS were active smokers, only 11% quit despite a rigorous smoking cessation program. Different from the NLST population, our findings indicate that patients without suspicious nodules were more likely to quit than those with suspicious nodules. The causes of these differing results are unknown. We theorize that the differences may be due to biological, cultural, psychological and socioeconomic factors. We suggest that future research should aim to examine these factors to identify barriers and facilitators to changing smoking behaviors among those undergoing LDCT-LCS.
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P1.03-050 - Outcomes after the Decision to Biopsy: Results from a Nurse Practitioner Run Multidisciplinary Lung Cancer Screening Program (ID 6231)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.R. Gilbert, J.T. Fathi, C.L. Wilshire, B.E. Louie, R.W. Aye, A.S. Farivar, E. Vallieres, J.A. Gorden
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer screening programs are increasing in popularity after results from the National Lung Screening Trial demonstrated improvement in mortality after screening with low dose computed tomography. Current guidelines recommend the availability of multidisciplinary care and evaluation; however, reported outcomes from multidisciplinary team decision making to proceed with diagnostic sampling in lung cancer screening remains sparse.
Methods:
A retrospective review of patients enrolled in the Swedish Cancer Institute Lung Cancer Screening Program from January 2013 to March 2016 was performed. The program is run by an independently practicing nurse practitioner, with a multidisciplinary team consisting of radiologists, interventional pulmonologists, and thoracic surgeons. Positive screening results (nodules >6mm) with the potential need to pursue diagnostic sampling were reviewed in a multidisciplinary fashion. Basic demographics and procedural outcomes after the decision to biopsy were obtained.
Results:
A total of 516 patients were enrolled within the lung cancer screening program from 2013 – 2016. Nodule(s) >6mm were identified in 164 (31.8%) patients. Subsequently, 25 (4.8%) patients underwent some form of invasive testing. The mean age of this population was 66.2 (SD-6.7) years with 56% (14/25) being female and mean pack years of 50.8 (SD-19.5). Percutaneous needle aspiration (n=11), endoscopic sampling (n=10), and surgical biopsy/resection (n=4) were performed as the first invasive diagnostic procedure. The outcomes of this initial sampling were cancer (n=15), non-diagnostic (n=7), benign (n=2), and infection (n=1). Three patients without an initial diagnosis underwent additional non-surgical biopsy attempts. Overall, surgical resection was performed in twelve patients (6 after previous diagnostic procedure, 2 after previous non-diagnostic procedure, and 4 as initial procedure). Final outcomes were cancer (n=16), non-diagnostic procedure (n=4), non-caseating granulomatous inflammation (n=2), benign diagnosis after wedge resection (n=2), and infection (n=1).
Conclusion:
Within a nurse practitioner led, multidisciplinary, lung cancer screening program, a small proportion of patients undergo invasive diagnostic testing, despite a rather high prevalence of potentially actionable nodules. Within the NLST population receiving computed tomography, 6.1% underwent invasive testing with 43% undergoing testing that ultimately did not result in a cancer diagnosis. Within our multidisciplinary program, 4.8% underwent invasive testing with 36% undergoing testing not ultimately resulting in a cancer diagnosis. The utilization of multidisciplinary teams during the biopsy decision-making process may help decrease the number of non-diagnostic procedures. Further research is needed to help identify tools that improve patient selection for invasive testing in lung cancer screening programs.
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P1.03-051 - Medically Underserved and Geographically Remote Individuals May Be Underrepresented in Current Lung Cancer Screening Programs (ID 6273)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): C.L. Wilshire, B.M. McCall, H.E. Modin, J.T. Fathi, C.R. Gilbert, B.E. Louie, R.W. Aye, A.S. Farivar, E. Vallieres, J.A. Gorden
- Abstract
Background:
The National Lung Screening Trial demonstrated a 20% reduction in lung cancer mortality and ushered in lung cancer screening (LCS). Study centers included 33 academic, mostly urban-based sites, which may underrepresent low socioeconomic remote populations with minimal health care access. United States Census Bureau 2014 data demonstrated that smoking is concentrated among adults with low income and education, and without private medical insurance; components of medically underserved/shortage area designations. We sought to assess the representation of underserved communities in our hospital-based Lung Cancer Screening Program (LCSP).
Methods:
We reviewed individuals referred to our LCSP from 2012-2016, consisting of two separate screening sites located within metropolitan King County, Washington. Each individual’s county and distance from the LCS site was calculated. Individual’s residence designation as a geographic medically underserved/shortage area was determined. Definitions include: medically underserved area [MUA; healthcare resources deficient region], medically underserved population [MUP; area with economic/cultural/linguistic barriers to primary care services], health professional shortage area [HPSA; primary care physician shortage].
Results:
We identified 599 referred individuals, median age 64, from 13/39 counties (King County and 12 clustered, surrounding counties). Overall, <20% of the referred population resided in underserved/shortage areas and <55% of the designated geographic underserved/shortage areas in the 13 counties had patient referrals (Table). Of those referred, 85% resided in King County, 17% in a MUA and 65% of the MUAs had patient referrals. Two percent of the referral population resided in a remote county, Clallam, where ≥70% of referred households were in underserved/shortage areas. Figure 1
Conclusion:
The majority of individuals referred reside within 10 miles of the LCS site. Less than 20% reside in designated underserved/shortage areas and <55% of underserved/shortage areas are represented. Creative and coordinated approaches, like Telemedicine, will be required to address the potential lack of LCS services in underserved/shortage areas and facilitate individuals remaining in their communities.
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P1.03-052 - The Effect of Rounding on Rate of Positive Results on CT Screening for Lung Cancer (ID 6095)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Li, R. Yip, R.S. Avila, C.I. Henschke, D.F. Yankelevitz
- Abstract
Background:
Effective management of small pulmonary nodules to reduce frequency of false positives has been one of the most challenging issues to implementation of screening. Measurement of size is important as it determines whether a nodule is positive result and also whether growth has occurred. Lung-RADS v.1 guideline requires nodule measurement to be rounded to the nearest whole number, it is not specified whether individual length and width measures should also be rounded prior to rounding the diameter. An alternative approach is the one used in I-ELCAP where measurements were recorded to one decimal place. This study explored how rounding would affect the frequency of positive results both for baseline and annual rounds.
Methods:
Using data collected from CT screenings of 21,136 I-ELCAP participants, we evaluated four different approaches for calculating the nodule diameter (D) based on measurements of the length (L) and width (W) listed below: 1) Measurement of L and W to one decimal place (x.x) and calculation of D without rounding; 2) rounding D to the nearest integer; 3) rounding the L and W measurements to the nearest integer before calculating D with no further rounding; and 4) rounding the calculated D determined by method 3 to the nearest integer. Threshold of positive results was 6.0 mm for baseline round and 4.0 mm for annual repeat rounds of screening. Frequency of positive results in the baseline and annual repeat rounds were compared.
Results:
For baseline screening using the current I-ELCAP definition (Method 1), the rate of positive results was 10.2%. Using method 2, 3 and 4, positive rates were 12.8%, 10.5% and 13.2%, respectively. Use of rounding would have increased the frequency of positive results by 25.7%, 3.0%, and 28.9%, respectively. Of 85,877 repeat screenings, the rate of positive results was 8.0% using method 1. Using method 2, 3 and 4, positive rates were 9.7%, 8.3% and 9.8%, respectively. Use of rounding would have increased the frequency of positive results on repeat screenings by 20.5%, 3.2%, and 22.3%, respectively.
Conclusion:
Regardless of where the rounding occurred, it results in more nodules designated as positive. This effect is most pronounced when the rounding occurs in average diameter, and since frequency of nodules increases as size decreases, small nodules are therefore the most frequent cause for positive results and rounding can lead to large increases in positive rates.
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- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) is recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) in high-risk patients, but a minority of eligible people is screened. It is unknown whether knowledge of USPSTF recommendations among primary care physicians (PCP) impacts perceived benefits and utilization of LDCT.
Methods:
As we previously reported, a randomly selected sample of 1384 primary care physicians in Los Angeles County was surveyed between January and October 2015, using surveys sent by mail, fax, and email. The response rate was 18%. Training background, years in practice, practice type, and respondent demographics were collected. We analyzed results based on the response to a question on whether the USPSTF recommends the use of LDCT to screen high-risk individuals for lung cancer.
Results:
One hundred seventeen (47%) PCPs responded that the USPSTF recommends LDCT for LCS. Of PCPs who were aware of USPSTF recommendations, 94% responded that CT was somewhat or very effective at reducing lung cancer mortality among individuals meeting eligibility criteria, compared with 79% who were unaware (p=0.013). 27% of those aware of the recommendations thought chest X-ray (CXR) was effective at reducing lung cancer mortality compared with 62% of unaware PCPs (p=0.001). A similar number of PCPs in each group ordered CXR for screening over the past 12 months, but a larger proportion of PCPs aware of guidelines ordered LDCT (69% vs 36%, p <0.001) and initiated a discussion on screening (84% vs 59%, p<0.001) over the past 12 month. 14% of PCPs aware of guidelines reported that benefits of LCS were not clear to them compared with 43% of those unaware of guidelines (p<0.001). Both groups of PCPs reported similar scores when questioned on other barriers to screening such as insurance coverage, risks of LCS, and cost to society. There were no differences between groups by practice size, training background, years in practice, or PCP demographics.
Conclusion:
Awareness of USPSTF recommendations for lung cancer screening is associated with the perception of benefit of LDCT and with increased utilization of LDCT for screening. Educational interventions for PCPs may improve adherence with LCS recommendations.
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P1.03-054 - Quantitative Accuracy and Lesion Detectability of Low-Dose FDG-PET for Lung Cancer Screening (ID 3839)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): I. Tham, J.D. Schaefferkoetter, A.T. Sjoeholm, M. Conti, J. Tam, R. Soo, D.W. Townsend
- Abstract
Background:
Low-dose computed tomography (CT) screening for high-risk patients can reduce lung cancer mortality, but false-positivity rates are high. Positron emission tomography (PET)/CT is more accurate compared to CT alone, but typically is associated with a higher radiation exposure. We investigate a low radiation dose PET/CT solution without compromising quality.
Methods:
Twenty lung cancer patients were scanned with PET/CT after an uptake period of 60 min, following injection of 5.9±0.14 mCi 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose. All were scanned with 2 beds covering the lungs at 10 min each, resulting in 120±25 x106 mean true coincident counts per bed. Reduced doses were simulated by randomly discarding events in the PET list mode according to 9 predefined true count levels, from 20 to 0.25 x10[6]. For each patient & simulated dose, the highest possible number of independent realizations was generated & reconstructed, up to 50. The reconstruction algorithm was OP-OSEM, using TOF and PSF, with 2 iterations, 21 subsets & 5mm smoothing, producing 400x400 image matrices with voxel size 2.04x2.04x2.03mm. At each simulated dose, lesions consistent with those of early lung cancer were identified & classified by metabolic volume, signal-to-background contrast, mean & max SUV, lesion-to-background SNR, & Hotelling observer SNR. Bias & stability of the lesion activity measurements were evaluated across all simulated dose levels, and detectability was determined by various human-trained, numerical observer models.
Results:
Twelve isolated lung lesions (mean volume 2.61±2.86 cm[3] on CT) were studied in detail. Analyses of bias & reproducibility in the lesion activity values showed that measurements were stable until the count levels approached extreme conditions. Bias in the lesion VOI mean & max SUV were relatively negligible until true count level was decreased to 1 million. Variance on reproducibility of lesion values showed a more dramatic trend, but standard deviation was still around 10% at 5 million counts.
Conclusion:
We show that simulated images with accurate lesion characteristics can be obtained at 1/12 of a typical radiotracer dose.
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P1.03-055 - LuCaS DA: A Lung Cancer Screening Decision Aid to Improve Screening Decisions (ID 6397)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.L. Studts, K. Brinker, S. Tannenbaum, M.M. Byrne
- Abstract
Background:
Although lung cancer (LC) continues to be one of the leading causes of cancer morbidity and mortality world-wide, the NLST trial showed that low dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening can substantially reduce mortality in specific high-risk populations. However, most individuals are not making informed decisions which take into account the risks of screening although US guidelines advocate for informed decision-making. We report preliminary results of a web-based interactive LC decision aid (LuCaS DA) on LC screening knowledge and decision making compared to the US National Cancer Institutes’ web-pages on LC screening.
Methods:
Individuals in the study (n=50; from rural Kentucky and SE Florida, USA) had an elevated risk for lung cancer (n=50) due to smoking. Participants completed a baseline survey and were randomized to viewing the LuCaS DA or the NCI website. After 2 weeks, participants completed an online survey. Surveys collected information on: demographics, health status, smoking history, knowledge of CT screening, decisions about being screened for lung cancer, and decisional conflict about screening.
Results:
Participants were 52.6 (SD 5.1) years old on average; were majority female (77.1%), White (62.0%), and non-Hispanic (83.7%), and reported have some insurance coverage (88.0%). Most were current daily smokers (70.2%), and overall had smoked an average of 27.9 (SD 7.7) years. Mean Decisional Conflict overall participants was 39.3 (SD 13.5) at baseline and 34.4 (SD 11.1) at 2 week follow up, with no differences between the arms. The percentage of participants show stated that they had made a decision about screening increased slightly from 32.7% at baseline to 37.5% at follow up. Preparedness for making a decision about screening (measured POST only) showed no differences between the arms. There were some increases in knowledge about CT screening and knowledge about LCS guidelines from initial to 2-week follow up. Finally, a qualitative exploration of the LuCaS DA showed that it had high levels of acceptability.
Conclusion:
DAs can facilitate informed decisions about participation in cancer screening, and US policies have required their use. This is the first study that we are aware of that assesses the use and effects of a lung cancer screening decision aid. These preliminary results show that the LuCaS DA can improve some outcomes, but not consistently more than the NCI webpages. Additional analyses will include the full sample of participants, evaluate a broader array of decision and behavioral outcomes, and consider longer term outcomes of the LuCaS DA.
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P1.03-056 - Implementation of a Prospective Biospecimen Collection Study in an Established Lung Cancer Screening Program (ID 6170)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J. Sands, K. Steiling, T. Sullivan, S. Flacke, K. Rieger-Christ
- Abstract
Background:
Complexities such as addressing indeterminate pulmonary nodules (IPNs) are an inherent part of a lung screening program, and defining which individuals will benefit from invasive intervention is not always known. With the goal of combining non-invasive biomarkers with imaging to more definitively stratify patients, we initiated an investigational biospecimen collection process into our lung screening program. Ultimately, these biomarkers may improve specificity within the screening population, thereby reducing the overall cost and potential morbidity from false positive results of low-dose computed tomography scan (LDCT) screening. Studies like this are important to the ongoing improvement of lung cancer screening.
Methods:
NCCN high-risk individuals enrolled in a high volume clinical lung screening program were introduced to our IRB approved research biospecimen study at the time of the scheduling of their LDCT. Patients were consented, and routine biospecimens were collected by research staff at the time of their LDCT scan, including nasal epithelial brushings, buccal swabs and blood. When available, additional biospecimens consisting of bronchial airway brushings and tumor samples were collected from subjects who underwent diagnostic interventions for suspicion of malignancy.
Results:
Since 2012 there have been 3856 patients enrolled and 8776 LDCT scans to date with 100 lung cancer diagnoses within our lung screening program. In 2014, funding (LUNGevity and Robert E Wise grants) was obtained for biospecimen collection from subjects enrolled in our institutional LDCT screening program. Initial prospective collection of biospecimens was slower than anticipated due to various factors. After review of the process, a number of adjustments were made, which significantly increased enrollment. This included implementation of a multidisciplinary taskforce consisting of research and clinical staff committed to patient outreach and participation. To date, samples from approximately 1420 subjects have been collected. Of these, 268 (19%) were found to have newly detected IPNs measuring 6-20mm on LDCT, and 28 samples were from patients with subsequent diagnoses of lung cancer.
Conclusion:
Successful coordination of biospecimen collection within a lung screening program is complex, but achievable with multidisciplinary coordination, and has great potential to help further stratify patients that may or may not benefit from invasive diagnostics and therapy. We demonstrate an established lung screening program that is successfully accruing to a prospective diagnostic study and share specific recommendations for how to successfully accrue in other programs.
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- Abstract
Background:
Both morbidity and mortality of lung cancer ranks first in China. According to the "2012 cancer registration report of China", Northeast China is a high prevalence area of lung cancer, so early diagnosis of lung cancer is particularly important. Based on this, we made the regional survey in Changchun city. (1) To investigate the incidence of pulmonary nodules and lung cancer in Changchun city. (2)To provide the foundation of large data study on early screening of lung cancer and disease control.
Methods:
Carry out the investigation of the people over 50 years of age in 10 communities in Changchun of Jilin Province (A total of 1461 people), including questionnaire, pulmonary function tests and low-dose spiral CT examination. The disease assessment and patient management are based on “Diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary nodules in Chinese expert consensus”.
Results:
The percentage of lung disease in the investigated population was 25.67%, and the constitution of the lung disease included: 30.67% of the lung nodules, 37.07% of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 18.67% of inflammation, 5.6% of the lung, 2.13% of pulmonary interstitial fibrosis, 2.13% of pleural effusion and 3.73% of other lung diseases. The number of pulmonary nodules was 115, accounting for 7.87% of the total number of screening, 89 cases of solitary nodules, 26 cases of multiple nodules. A total of 4 patients with lung cancer were confirmed by pathology, including 2 cases of adenocarcinoma, 1 cases of squamous cell carcinoma and 1 case of mucinous carcinoma of the lung. All of the cancer cases were solitary nodules, and accounted for 3.48% of the total samples. Among them, 3 patients are male with a history of smoking, and 1 is female without any history of smoking. According to the nodule size, the diameters of nodule in 3 cases are greater than 8mm and 1 case is less than 4mm. According to the quality of nodules, 3 cases are solid and mixed nodules, and 1 case is ground-glass opacity.
Conclusion:
(1)Smoking is a risk factor for lung cancer. (2) Solid and mixed character nodules in pulmonary nodules and larger diameter nodules are more likely to develop into cancer, so they should be strengthened management. (3) Low-dose spiral CT is helpful for early diagnosis of lung cancer.
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P1.03-058 - Cost-Effectiveness of CT Screening in the Early Detection of Lung Cancer (ID 5862)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T.J. Szczęsny, M. Kanarkiewicz, J. Kowalewski
- Abstract
Background:
Screening using computerized tomography of the chest for an early detection of lung cancer has been performed worldwide since decades, but only two years ago, after proving in a prospective randomized study that it prolongs survival of the study population, it received the recommendation of scientific societies. However, the issue of cost-effectiveness of this screening remains open.
Methods:
A review of several cost-effectiveness analyses of lung cancer screening with low-dose CT available in the literature was performed. We also conducted our own cost-effectiveness analysis on the basis of epidemiological data and data from the National Health Fund concerning the type, number and cost of medical procedures reimbursed for lung cancer patients.
Results:
The results of cost-effectiveness analyses carried out in different countries are equivocal and depend mainly on the inclusion and exclusion criteria, methods of analysis and prices of medical procedures. More recent analyses, performed in different countries, indicate high profitability of this screening. In our study, the cost of early detection of one lung cancer using CT scan is comparable to the cost of a detection of one breast cancer using mammography and is about 3,400 Euro. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) in our analysis is about 1180 Euro / life year gained.
Conclusion:
As the widely accepted limit of cost-effectiveness is three times the gross national product per capita / life year gained, lung cancer screening with low-dose CT in Poland should be considered highly cost-effective. In future screening programs, high cost-effectiveness can be achieved by strict adherence to inclusion and exclusion criteria. To ensure this, screening should be performed either as prospective observatory non-randomized clinical trials or in dedicated screening centers. To ensure low level of false positive and false negative results, radiologists in screening centers should be equipped with software for measuring and monitoring the volume of pulmonary nodules.
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P1.03-059 - Organized High Risk Lung Cancer Screening in Ontario, Canada: A Multi-Centre Prospective Evaluation (ID 6086)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Tammemägi, J. Hader, M. Yu, K. Govind, E. Svara, M. Yurcan, B. Miller, G. Darling
- Abstract
Background:
Guidelines published in Ontario Canada in 2013, recommend screening individuals at high risk of lung cancer with low-dose computed tomography through an organized program. Cancer Care Ontario, Ontario’s provincial cancer agency, is implementing a prospective evaluation of organized high risk lung cancer screening (HRLCS) in a 2-year, multi-centre pilot. The pilot evaluation aims to inform: · Recommendations to Ontario’s Ministry of Health and Long Term Care regarding the potential for a provincial program · Optimal program design and requirements for effective implementation
Methods:
The process to establish a robust evaluation plan for the HRLCS pilot included the development of a logic model, evaluation objectives and evaluation questions. Input from a multidisciplinary panel of experts, including clinicians, epidemiologists, and administrators guided the development of the evaluation plan. A modified Delphi technique facilitated panel input on the proposed evaluation questions, which were drafted based on the logic model and evaluation objectives, and aligned to the steps in the screening pathway. Panel members rated the importance of each evaluation question through an online survey using a 5-point Likert scale, and proposed changes or additional questions. A question was retained if >75% of panel members rated it as important or very important. A facilitated discussion post survey enabled a review of survey results to confirm consensus on the final set of evaluation questions.
Results:
The survey was completed by all panel members. Of 32 evaluation questions proposed, 31 were rated as important or very important by more than 75% of respondents. Endorsed questions addressed both screening processes and key outcomes, and included, for example: · Did recruitment strategies engage individuals representative of the eligible population? · Did the follow-up processes occur as intended? · Did screening identify early stage lung cancers? Panel discussion led to retention of the single question that did not meet the threshold, and the addition of one new question to the evaluation plan. Given consensus was achieved, a second round modified Delphi survey was not required.
Conclusion:
Using an expert panel and modified Delphi technique was an effective method to obtain consensus on the pilot evaluation questions. Endorsed evaluation questions will frame the development of measures and indicators to be assessed throughout the pilot. This comprehensive evaluation strategy will inform the design and implementation of a high quality organized HRLCS screening program.
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P1.03-060 - Lung Cancer Screening: A Qualitative Study Exploring the Decision to Opt Out of Screening (ID 4667)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): L. Carter-Harris, S. Brandzel, J.A. Roth, K. Wernli, D. Buist
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer screening (LCS) with annual low-dose computed tomography is relatively new for long-term smokers in the US supported by a US Preventive Services Task Force Grade B recommendation. As LCS programs are more widely implemented and providers engage patients about LCS, it is critical to understand what influences the decision to screen, or not, for lung cancer. Understanding LCS behavior among high-risk smokers who opt out provides insight, from the patient perspective, about the shared decision-making (SDM) process. This study explored LCS-eligible patients’ decision to opt out of LCS after receiving a provider recommendation. New knowledge will inform intervention development to enhance SDM processes between high-risk smokers and their provider, and decrease decisional conflict about LCS.
Methods:
Semi-structured qualitative interviews were performed with 18 LCS-eligible men and women who were members of an integrated healthcare system in Seattle about their decision to opt out of screening. Participants met LCS criteria for age, smoking and pack-year history. Audio-recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim. Two researchers with cancer screening and qualitative expertise conducted data analysis using thematic content analytic procedures.
Results:
Participant mean age was 66 years (SD 6.5). Majority were female (61%), Caucasian (83%), current smokers (61%). Five themes emerged: 1) Knowledge Avoidance; 2) Perceived Low Value; 3) False Positive Worry; 4) Practical Barriers; and 5) Misunderstanding. Representative thematic example quotes are presented in the Table below.Knowledge Avoidance “It’s fear of the unknown…if I know, you have to follow through and do more and more.” Perceived Low Value “It could show me if I had lung cancer…what are they going to do?...screening doesn’t really make any difference...” False Positive Worry “I did schedule one…then after I read the print out, I canceled it…the false positives were so high. I thought why… that would be so stressful…” Practical Barriers “I really didn’t have time to get over there.” Misunderstanding “I wasn’t hurting or having any problems breathing…wasn’t a top priority for me” [reflecting misunderstanding of the concept of screening]
Conclusion:
Many screening-eligible smokers opt out of LCS. Participants in our study provided new insights into why some patients make this choice. LCS is effective in early lung cancer detection among high-risk patients. However, LCS has associated risks and harms making the SDM process critical. Understanding why people decide not to screen will enhance future efforts to improve knowledge transfer from providers to patients about the risks and benefits of LCS and ultimately enhance SDM about screening.
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P1.03-061 - Patient Motivations for Pursuing Low-Dose CT Lung Cancer Screening in an Integrated Healthcare System: A Qualitative Evaluation (ID 4396)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.A. Roth, S. Brandzel, L. Carter-Harris, D. Buist, K. Wernli
- Abstract
Background:
Low-dose CT (LDCT) lung cancer screening for heavy smokers was given a ‘B’ rating by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) in 2013, and gained widespread insurance coverage in the U.S. in 2015. Little is known about patient motivations for pursuing lung cancer screening outside of clinical trials because it is a relatively new covered service. The objective of this study was to understand some of the major factors that motivated patients to pursue LDCT lung cancer screening in an integrated healthcare system.
Methods:
We conducted a semi-structured qualitative interviews with 20 adult men and women who were members of an integrated healthcare system in Washington State about their choice to receive LDCT lung cancer screening. Participants met USPSTF screening criteria for age and smoking history. Trained staff contacted a total of 25 randomly selected eligible participants and completed 20 interviews (80% response rate) in the Fall of 2015. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and three investigators used inductive content analysis to identify themes about motivations for pursuing screening.
Results:
Participant mean age was 68 years, 40% were male, 90% were Caucasian, and 35% were current smokers. Analysis of interview transcripts identified 6 primary themes (Table 1) that were common motivations for pursuing LDCT lung cancer screening: 1) early-detection benefit, 2) limited understanding of LDCT harms, 3) relatively low radiation dose, 4) trust in the referring clinician, 5) friends and family with advanced cancer, and 6) low out-of-pocket cost. Figure 1
Conclusion:
The participants in our study were motivated to obtain lung cancer screening based on perceived benefit of early-detection, an absence of safety concerns, social factors, and low expense. Our findings provide new insights about patient motivations for pursuing LDCT screening, and can be used to improve lung cancer screening shared decision-making processes.
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P1.03-062 - Lung Cancer Screening with Low-Dose CT in China: Study Design and Baseline Results from the First Round Screening Arm (ID 5639)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): H. Wang, Y. Zhang, J. Teng, Q. Chen, J. Ye, J. Lou, R. Shi, L. Jiang, A. Gu, Y. Zhao, B. Jin, X. Zhang, J. Xu, Y. Lou, F. Qian, W. Yang, B. Han
- Abstract
Background:
Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT (LDCT) was shown to reduce lung cancer mortality by 20% in the National Lung Screening Trial. However, several other trails have reported that there was no reduction in lung cancer mortality with a LDCT screening strategy. Meanwhile, whether LDCT screens could decrease healthcare costs is yet insufficiently explored. The objectives of the present study was to investigate whether LDCT screening is capable to reduce the lung cancer mortality by at least 20% and analyze the healthcare costs of the lung cancer LDCT screening in China.
Methods:
The present study is a randomized controlled trial of LDCT screening for lung cancer versus usual care. Eligible participants were those aged 45–70 years, and with either of the following risk factors: 1) history of cigarette smoking ≥ 20 pack-years, and, if former smokers, had quit within the previous 15 years; 2) malignant tumors history in immediate family members; 3) personal cancer history; 4) professional exposure to carcinogens; 5) long term exposure to second-hand smoke; 6) long term exposure to cooking oil fumes. All the participants were randomized into a screening arm with three rounds of alternate years LDCT screens and a control arm with three rounds of alternate years questionnaire inquiries. Management of positive screening test was carried out by a prespecified protocol.
Results:
From November 2013 to November 2014, 5933 participants were enrolled in our trail, of which 2933 were assigned to LDCT screening arm, and 3000 to control arm. In the first screening round, 2892 participants (98.6%) undergo LDCT after randomization. At baseline 742 subjects (25.7%) showed noncalcified nodules (NCN) larger than 4 mm. 69 cases were highly suspected of lung cancer according to the suggestion of three experienced experts. The highly suspected cases were accounting for 9.30% of all NCN subjects and 2.39% of all the screening arm participants. By March 2016, 26 cases underwent surgical resections, including 23 lung adenocarcinoma, 1 lung squamous cell carcinoma and 2 benign lesions, representing a positive lung cancer detection rate with low-dose CT screening of 0.83%(24/2892). Among all the lung cancer cases, 23/24 (95.8%) had stage I disease, and 1/24 (4.2%) had stage II disease. The second round screening was still ongoing since May 2016.
Conclusion:
Screening with LDCT increases the detection rate of early stage lung cancers (stage I and II) in a high risk population.
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P1.03-063 - Quantitative Imaging Features Predict Incidence Lung Cancer in Low-Dose Computed Tomography (LDCT) Screening (ID 5669)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): D. Cherezov, S. Hawkins, D. Goldgof, L. Hall, Y. Balagurunathan, R.J. Gillies, M.B. Schabath
- Abstract
Background:
Although the NLST demonstrated a benefit of LDCT screening for reducing lung cancer and all-cause mortality, LDCT screening identifies large numbers of indeterminate pulmonary nodules and there are limited clinical decision tools that predict probability of cancer development. Using data and images from the NLST, we extracted quantitative imaging features from nodules of baseline positive screens (T0) and delta features from T0 to first follow-up (T1) and performed analyses to identify imaging features that predict incidence lung cancer. Analyses were stratified by nodule size since guidelines in the U.S. have increased the size threshold for positivity to 6 mm.
Methods:
We extracted 438 features from T0 nodules, and delta features from T0 to T1, including size, shape, location, and texture information. Nodules were identified for 170 cases that were diagnosed with incidence lung cancer at the first (T1) or second (T2) follow-up screen and for 328 controls that had three consecutive positive screens (T0 to T2) not diagnosed as lung cancer. The cases and controls were split into a training cohort and a testing cohort and classifier models (Decision tree-J48, Rule Based Classier-JRIP, Naive Bayes, Support Vector Machine, Random Forests) that were stratified by nodule size (< 6 mm, 6 to 16 mm, ≥ 16 mm) were used to identify the most predictive feature sets.
Results:
The training cohort consisted of 83 cases and 172 controls and a testing cohort of 77 cases and 135 controls. Within and across each cohort, there were no significant differences in demographic and clinical covariates. Training and testing was first performed using three difference nodule size groups (< 6 mm, 6 to 16 mm, and ≥ 16 mm) which revealed for < 6 mm a final model of 5 features (AUROC=0.75), 6 to 16 mm a final model with 10 features (AUROC=0.73), and ≥ 16 mm a final model with 10 features (AUROC=0.83). Finally, we combined the two larger groups and found for ≥ 6 mm a final model with 10 features with an AUROC of 0.84 (95% CI 0.8-0.87), Sensitivity of 60% (95% CI 0.50-0.71), and Specificity of 95% (95% CI 0.92-0.99).
Conclusion:
In this analysis we revealed a set of highly informative imaging features that predicts subsequent development of incidence lung cancer among individuals presenting with a ≥ 6 mm nodule. These imaging features could be scored in the clinical setting to improve nodule management of current size-based screening guidelines.
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P1.03-064 - Chest X-Ray (CXR) Screening Improves Lung Cancer (LC) Survival in the Prostate Lung Colon and Ovary (PLCO) Randomized Population Trial (RPT) (ID 5507)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.P.E. Flores, A. Moreno-Koehler, M. Finkelman, J. Caro, G.M. Strauss
- Abstract
Background:
The effectiveness of CXR-screening for LC was estimated in the context of performing a cost-effectiveness analysis of LC-screening comparing CT, CXR, and no screening. CXR-screening has long been considered ineffective because no RPT has demonstrated a LC mortality reduction. However, CXR-screening has been shown to produce a significant survival advantage not attributable to overdiagnosis or other screening biases (JCO:20,1973,2002). The lung portion of the PLCO trial, which compared CXR to no screening, reported no LC mortality reduction after 13-years follow-up (JAMA,306,1875,2011). However, that analysis included all LCs diagnosed over 13-years, despite the fact that the active screening period lasted only 3-years. LC survival was not reported. Since screening is exceedingly unlikely to provide any advantage to individuals diagnosed many years after active screening is discontinued, and because sojourn time associated with CXR-screening is estimated to be up to 4 years, we evaluated outcomes of LCs diagnosed within 7-years of randomization in PLCO.
Methods:
PLCO randomized 77,445 subjects to an experimental group (EG) undergoing a prevalence CXR and 3 annual incidence CXRs and 77,456 others to an unscreened control group (CG). Using Kaplan-Meier methods in the intent-to-screen analysis of PLCO data, LC survival and mortality were calculated for all LCs diagnosed during the 13-year follow-up, as well as those diagnosed within 7 years of randomization. LC incidence and mortality were compared with Fisher’s exact test. Survival was compared with the log-rank test. All p-values are two-sided.
Results:
After 13-years, 1,838 and 1,737 lung cancers were detected in EG and CG, respectively (RR=1.06; 95%CI 0.99-1.13; p=0.09). Median survival was 13.2-months vs. 11.5-months, and 5-year survival was 24% vs. 19% in EG and CG respectively (p=0.0008). There were 1,217 and 1,203 LC deaths, indicating no LC mortality reduction (RR=1.01; 95%CI: 0.93-1.09; p=0.77). Within 7-years of randomization, 1,072 and 1,022 lung cancers were detected in EG and CG, respectively (RR=1.05; 95%CI 0.96-1.14; p=0.27). Median survival was 15.4-months vs. 11.5months, and 5-year survival was 27% vs. 18% in EG and CG, respectively (p<0.0001). Among these cases, there were 764 and 811 LC deaths, indicating a trend toward reduced LC mortality that was not statistically significant (RR=0.94; 95%CI:0.85-1.04; p=0.24)
Conclusion:
In PLCO, randomization to CXR-screening produced a significant improvement in LC survival. This survival advantage cannot be attributed to any conventional screening bias including overdiagnosis. The benefit is diminished when lung cancers diagnosed well beyond the active screening interval are included in the analysis.
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P1.03-065 - Comparison of the Proposed IASLC 8th TNM Lung Cancer Staging System to the 7th Edition (ID 6230)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Fong, B. Page, D. Flynn, L. Passmore, E. McCaul, I. Yang, M. Windsor, R. Bowman, R. Naidoo, T. Guan, S. Philott, M. Blake
- Abstract
Background:
We performed a validation study of the proposed International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer (IASLC) 8[th] tumour, node, metastasis (TNM) and grouping revisions on the non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC) in our Institution, where we are a regular contributor of a subset of cases for the IASLC TNM staging revision projects.
Methods:
Data was collected from the Queensland Cancer Control Analysis Team (QCCAT) Queensland Oncology Online (QOOL) registry of NSCLC or SCLC cases presented to The Prince Charles Hospital (TPCH) between 2000 and 2015. It was validated against Queensland Integrated Lung Cancer Outcomes Project (QILCOP) registry with case identification number, first name, last name, and date of birth. Cases were classified according to IASLC TNM revisions 7[th] edition and then according to the proposed TNM revisions and stage groupings where data available. Kaplan-Meier curves were plotted and survival differences tested with Log-Rank test using SPSS Statistics ver. 23.
Results:
The entire study population consisted of three thousand six hundred and thirty-seven cases. One thousand three hundred and ninety-two non-surgical patients had complete clinical staging and one thousand and fifteen patients with pathological staging were identified. Median survival in clinical staging by the 7[th] edition showed progressive reduction in median survival with increasing Stage (IA:1480, IB:714, IIA:715, IIB:391, IIIA:399, IIIB285, IV:196; days) which was similar in the proposed 8[th] edition staging noting small numbers in IA1 (IA1:1385, IA2:2098, IA3:1004, IB:801, IIA:550, IIB:589, IIIA:448, IIIB285, IIIC:265, IVA:218, IVB:106; days). A similar pattern was reflected in pathological staging 7[th] edition TNM staging (IA:3725, IB:3486, IIA:1796, IIB:1209, IIIA:841, IIIB:587, IV:869; “days) and in the proposed 8[th] edition staging (IA1:1929, IA2:3586, IA3:3804, IB:3640, IIA:2977, IIB:1796, IIIA:949, IIIB:723, IVA:869; “days”). Log-Rank test in all the survival curves were <0.001.
Conclusion:
Conclusions: The proposed 8[th] edition TNM classification appears to be a more refined predictor of prognosis. However, our cohort only had small sample sizes for Stage I cases, which need validation and further hazard ratio and multivariate analysis is recommended. Acknowledgements: patients and staff at TPCH and UQTRC
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P1.03-066 - Incorporation of a Molecular Prognostic Classifier Improves Conventional Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer TNM Staging (ID 5831)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): J.R. Kratz, N.R. Cook, G.A. Woodard, K.D. Jones, M.A. Gubens, T.M. Jahan, I. Kim, B. He, D.M. Jablons, M.J. Mann
- Abstract
Background:
Tumor size, nodal spread, and distant metastases form the basis of current non-small cell lung cancer staging. Despite undergoing a major revision in 2009, the poor outcomes of early-stage lung cancer patients relative to other solid tumors such as breast and colorectal cancer suggests that further improvement to our ability to stage non-small cell lung cancers is needed. In this study, we demonstrate the benefit of integrating a clinically validated molecular prognostic signature into conventional TNM staging.
Methods:
A new staging system integrating a 14-gene molecular prognostic classifier with TNM descriptors was developed using 332 patients with stage I-IIIB non-squamous, non-small cell lung cancer resected at the University of California, San Francisco. This staging system was subsequently validated on a separate multi-institutional international cohort of 1379 patients with stage I-IIIB disease. Reclassification measures were used to assess for improvements in calibration and discrimination beyond conventional TNM staging.
Results:
In the validation cohort, 78.2% of patients were reclassified using the new staging system. 73% of these patients were reclassified more accurately. The new staging system demonstrated improved measures of model fit including the modified Nagelkerke’s R[2] statistic as well as the c-index. In addition, incorporation of the molecular classifier resulted in a Net Reclassification Improvement of 16.6% (95%CI 7.9-25.2%) and a relative Integrated Discrimination Improvement of 27.9% (95%CI 6.4-49.4%). Kaplan-Meier analysis of overall survival after surgical resection demonstrated superior survival curve separation with the addition of the molecular classifier. Figure 1. Kaplan-Meier analysis of overall survival from time of surgical resection (A: TNM staging, B: TNMB staging). Figure 1
Conclusion:
Incorporation of a molecular classifier of tumor biology offers substantial improvements to conventional TNM staging and encourages application of molecular prognostic classifiers into the refinement of TNM staging systems for other solid tumors.
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P1.03-067 - Validation of the IASLC 8th Edition (8E) TNM Classification for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer by the Quality of Surgical Resection in a US Cohort (ID 6237)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M.P. Smeltzer, N.R. Faris, C. Fehnel, C. Houston-Harris, M.A. Ray, Y. Lee, M.B. Meadows, E.T. Robbins, S. Signore, C. Mutrie, R.U. Osarogiagbon
- Abstract
Background:
We compared the prognostic impact of 8E to 7[th] Edition(7E), using sequentially-defined surgical quality cohorts.
Methods:
We analyzed curative-intent resections for non-small cell lung cancer from 2009-2016 in a population based cohort from 4 Dartmouth Referral Regions in 3 US states. Patients were re-staged by 8E criteria. Survival analyses used Kaplan-Meier estimates and Proportional Hazards models with adjusted hazard ratios(aHR) controlling for age, histology, grade, and comorbidities.
Results:
548 of 2226 patients were stage-redistributed: 525(24%) up, 23(1%) down-staged. The largest shifts were from IB to IIA (76/522 [15%]);IIA to IIB (238/251[95%]); IIB to IIIA (88/217 [41%]); IIIA to IIIB (59/277[21%]). We found no difference in unadjusted survival in patients upstaged to IIA compared with those remaining in IB (p=0.55). Patients upstaged from IIB to IIIA had similar survival to those remaining IIB (p=0.4884), but were similar to patients already IIIA by 7E (p=0.8152). However, patients upstaged from IIIA to IIIB had worse survival than those remaining in IIIA (p=0.0360). Sub-classification of IA had no prognostic value when comparing IA1 vs. IA2 (p=0.74), but patients in IA3 had significantly worse survival than those in IA2 (p=0.0177). 5-year survival estimates for IA1/IA2/IA3 were 65%, 68%, and 61% in our cohort, compared to 92%, 83%, and 77% in the IASLC database. Adjusted models indicate 8E stage as a significant prognostic factor (p<0.0001), with increasing hazards of death with each progressive stage beyond IA2 (Table 1). This result was reasonably consistent as the quality of resection increased incrementally from: All Patients, excluding margin-positives, excluding margin-positives and pNX resections, excluding margin-positives and resections without mediastinal nodes(MedNX).IASLC 8th-EditionStage 3-Year SurvivalEstimate (95% CI) 5-Year SurvivalEstimate (95% CI) IA1(N=91) 0.80(0.69-0.88) 0.65(0.48-0.77) IA2(N=454) 0.80(0.75-0.84) 0.68(0.62-0.73) IA3(N=312) 0.71(0.65-0.76) 0.61(0.54-0.68) IB(N=509) 0.67(0.63-0.72) 0.55(0.49-0.60) IIA(N=81) 0.66(0.53-0.76) 0.61(0.48-0.72) IIB(N=375) 0.59(0.53-0.64) 0.45(0.39-0.52) IIIA(N=302) 0.50(0.43-0.56) 0.41(0.34-0.48) IIIB(N=62) 0.39(0.26-0.52) 0.29(0.18-0.42) IV(N=40) 0.44(0.26-0.61) 0.44(0.26-0.61) Adjusted Hazard Ratios by Quality Parameters All Patients (N=2195) Exclude Margin+ (N=2090) Exclude Margin+/pNX (N=1939) Exclude Margin+/MedNX (N=1656) IA1 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 IA2 0.83 0.83 0.70 0.75 IA3 1.12 1.11 1.00 1.13 IB 1.30 1.26 1.11 1.23 IIA 1.34 1.27 1.11 1.25 IIB 1.72 1.69 1.56 1.69 IIIA 2.40 2.31 2.11 2.45 IIIB 3.73 3.21 2.95 3.41 IV 3.76 3.43 2.62 3.11
Conclusion:
8E was generally supported by our data, although modifications for Stage IA1-IIB patients were not fully evident, even in high-quality resections. The survival disparity with IASLC data suggests that unidentified confounding factors are impairing survival in this early-stage US NSCLC cohort.
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P1.03-068 - Impact of Positive Pleural Lavage Cytology or Malignant Effusion on Survival in Patients Having Lung Resection for NSCLC (ID 4117)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Obata, N. Yamasaki, Y. Kitamura, G. Hatachi, T. Miyazaki, K. Matsumoto, T. Tsuchiya, K. Tabata, T. Nagayasu
- Abstract
Background:
Pleural lavage cytology (PLC) is the microscopic study of cells obtained from saline instilled into and retrieved from the chest during surgery for NSCLC. PLC is not reflected in the 7th TNM classification of lung cancer by the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC),although it is known that PLC-positive means worth prognosis. The reason is that information regarding the treatment of PLC-positive patients is still limited. On the other hand, malignant effusion is categorized M1a, and reflect the grade of malignancy more. The aim of this study is to evaluate the possibility of being an established independent predictor of prognosis and the efficacy of intrapleural chemotherapy (IPC) in PLC-positive patients.
Methods:
1,165 of the 1,473 lung cancer patients who underwent surgery had undergone PLC before thoracotomy, following by a complete resection (PLC-positive:41 patients) and 16 patients with malignant effusion were evaluated. The treatment was performed for 16 patients with malignant effusion and 27 patents with PLC-positive. After pulmonary resection, IPC was performed after surgery, and the pleural cavity was filled with cisplatin with a normal saline solution. The disease-free survival (DFS) and the overall survival (OS) of the patients were evaluated.
Results:
The pathological diagnosis showed that 41 patients (2.8 %) were positive for (or suspected to have) malignancy in their PLC. The univariate analysis showed that only T category and Lymph node metastasis were significant predictors of a PLC-positive status. The 5-year overall survival in PLC-positive patients was 37 % and that in PLC-negative patients was 75 %. The univariate (p<0.01) analyses showed that the status of PLC was significantly associated with the overall survival. Correction for differences in survival were obtained in the earlier stages than stage IIIA . Twenty-six of the 42 PLC-positive patients underwent IPC. The median survival time of the IPC group was 47.0months and that of those without IPC was 17.4 monthes (p<0.01), respectively. But, there are no significant differences between these groups with respect of DFS and reccurent site.
Conclusion:
PLC should be considered in all patients with NSCLC suitable for resection. A positive result can be an independent predictor of adverse survival especially in early stages. IPC may improve the OS in PLC-positive NSCLC patients and patients with malignant effusion, and a further prospective evaluation regarding this therapy is warranted.
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P1.03-069 - EGFR Mutations Have Greater Influence on Survival Than Proposed M Descriptors of New TNM Classification for Lung Cancer (ID 5294)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): K. Stanic, M. Vrankar
- Abstract
Background:
The forthcoming 8th edition of TNM staging system for lung cancer proposes revision of M descriptor. No changes of M1a category is suggested, while further sub-classification of M1b category into M1b (single distant metastatic lesion in single organ) and M1c (multiple distant metastatic lesions) is proposed. The limitations of new classification due to lack of information on EGFR and ALK status that significantly impact treatment response and outcome have been pointed out, however no further analysis addressing this issue has been published. Here we report the impact of EGFR mutation status on survival in view of new TNM classification system.
Methods:
Database of 479 metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, treated between 2009 and 2011, all tested for EGFR mutations, was retrospectively reviewed to categorize them into one of the new sub-groups according to new M descriptors. Medical records of 355 patients, among them 89 with EGFR mutations (EGFR-m), had sufficient information that allowed appropriate new categorisation.
Results:
After a median follow up of 53.9 months, median overall survival (mOS) of EGFR-m patients (20.6 months) was significantly longer than mOS of patients without EGFR mutations (8.3 months, p<0.001). Patients with the smallest disease burden (M1b sub-group) had the longest mOS among EGFR wild type patients (EGFR-wt) and EGFR-m patients, 14.4 months and 41.1 month, respectively. However, due to small number of patients in M1b subgroup, the difference was not statistically significant (p=0.08). In spite of widespread metastatic disease in M1c EGFR-m patients, they had longer mOS than M1b EGFR-wt patients with the lowest disease burden, 18.8 vs 14.4 months, respectively.
Conclusion:
EGFR mutational status has probably more important impact on mOS than the number of metastasis or number of metastatic sites in NSCLC. Our results indicate that further analysis is warranted to address this issue.M descriptor EGFR-m EGFR-wt n mOS (months) n mOS (months) p M1a 17 22.3 61 10.7 0.022 M1b 5 41.1 32 14.4 0.080 M1c 67 18.8 173 6.6 <0.001 all 89 20.6 266 8.3 <0.001
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P1.03-070 - The Impact of Advances in Systemic Staging on the Rate of Metachronous and Synchronous Metastases in Patients Lung Cancer (ID 4335)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): U. Yılmaz, L.B. Marks, K. Wang
- Abstract
Background:
To quantify the impact of advances in systemic staging (i.e. from CT-based to PET-based over the last ≈ 20 years) on the rate of distant metastases detected at their time of initial diagnosis (synchronous) and sometime after initial diagnosis (metachronous) in patients with lung cancer.
Methods:
The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) data base, representing 10 % of the US population was used to analyze lung cancers from 1988-2008. (a) The fraction of patients with overt synchronous metastases at diagnosis was noted. (b) Among patients without overt metastasis at diagnosis, their 5-year mortality rate was taken as an estimate of their rate of metachronous metastasis (as most deaths were due to distant metastases). (c) The overall rate of metastases (synchronous + metachronous) amongst all patients was computed. (d) The fraction of all metastases detectable at initial diagnosis (synchronous / [synchronous + metachronous]) was computed. Rates were computed for patient cohorts diagnosed in different time intervals from 1988-2008, to reflect the use of different systemic staging methods over the 20-year interval.
Results:
(a) The rate of synchronous metastatic disease slowly increased from ≈ 53% in the earlier years to ≈ 55% in 2008. (b) Among patients without overt metastasis at diagnosis, the rate of metachronous metastatic disease slowly decreased from ≈ 73% in the earlier years to ≈ 62% in 2008. (c) If one assumes that most of the metachronous metastatic lesions were present (but covert) at the time of the initial diagnosis of the primary disease, then one can estimate that ≈ 83-87% of patients have micro/macro metastatic disease at presentation (this rate is basically unchanged over time, but small changes over time may reflect the impact of systemic chemotherapy). (d) Among all patients with metastatic disease, ≈ 60.4% of metastatic lesions were detectable clinically or with CT at the time of diagnosis in the pre-PET era, vs. ≈ 66.6% of these lesions being detectable clinically or with CT and/or PET in the PET era.
Conclusion:
The addition of PET appears to have a small but measurable impact on the rates of synchronous and metachronous metastasis, resulting in stage migration from metachronous to synchronous (i.e. from covert to overt) metastases at the time of diagnosis. The addition of PET to the pre-treatment evaluation increases the ability to detect metastatic disease by ≈ 6% (from 60.4 to 66.6%).
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P1.03-071 - Impact of Visceral Plural Invasion to T Descriptors: Based on the Forthcoming Eighth Edition of TNM Classification for Lung Cancer (ID 5702)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Suzuki, T. Matsunaga, K. Takamochi, S. Oh, K. Suzuki
- Abstract
Background:
According to the forthcoming eighth edition of TNM classification, T descriptors and M descriptors will be subdivided. Visceral plural invasion of lung cancer has been known as a non-size-based T2 descriptor. However, the definition still lacks in detail, and its validation is not included.
Methods:
We retrospectively reviewed 1250 patients, who underwent curative surgical resection for non-small cell lung cancer at Juntendo University Hospital, between January 2008 and December 2014. Patients with pathologic N1 or N2 disease were excluded. We subdivided tumor size based on the eighth edition of TNM classification. Cumulative survival rates were evaluated by the Kaplan–Meier method. Statistical differences in survival status were evaluated using the log-rank test.
Results:
In tumor size of 0-4cm, overall survival was significantly different between pl0 and pl1-pl2 in each tumor size; 0-1cm (p<0.0001), 1-2cm (p=0.001), 2-3cm (p=0.007), 3-4cm (p=0.012). In tumor size of over 4cm, overall survival was not different between pl0 and pl1-pl2 in each tumor size; 4-5cm (p=0.825), 5-7cm (p=0.311), over 7cm (p=0.272). In tumor size of 4-5cm with pl0-pl2, a five-year survival rate was 60%. In tumor size of 0-4cm with pl0-pl1, a five-year survival rate was not significant difference with in tumor size of 4-5cm with pl0-pl2; 0-1cm 50% (p=0.799), 1-2cm 71% (p=0.169), 2-3cm 70% (p=0.370), 3-4cm 67% (p=0.609).
Conclusion:
In pathologic N0M0 disease, there was no prognostic difference between tumor size of 0-4cm with pl1-pl2 and 4-5cm with any pl. In this study, tumors 4cm or less with visceral plural invasion become classified as T2b, and tumors larger than 4cm but 5cm or less also become classified as T2b regardless of visceral plural invasion.
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- Abstract
Background:
Integrated 18 fluorine fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET-CT has shown somewhat variable sensitivity and specificity for nodal staging in tuberculosis endemic areas. This variation mainly because PET scans show falsely increased 18F-FDG uptake in inflammatory nodes, which may be observed in lymph nodes containing calcification or showing higher attenuations than those of surrounding great vessels on unenhanced CT scans. TB is a major health problem in India, incidence is around 2.1 million cases annually.The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of PET-CT for mediastinal nodal staging in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients in a tuberculosis-endemic country.
Methods:
Prospective assessment of the diagnostic efficacy of integrated PET-CT for detecting mediastinal nodal metastasis was performed from February 2012 to February 2016. A total 160 patients underwent surgery for pathologically proven NSCLC. Patients who received chemotherapy or radiotherapy prior to surgery were excluded from study. Thus assessment of the diagnostic efficacy of integrated PET-CT for detecting nodal metastasis was performed in 46 patients (Male to Female ratio:4; mean age- 55 years). Patients underwent an integrated PET-CT examination and subsequent surgical nodal staging. One radiologist and 1 nuclear medicine specialist together prospectively evaluated PET-CT datasets.Nodes showing greater 18F-FDG uptake at PET without benign calcification or high attenuation >70 household unit (HU) at unenhanced CT were regarded as being positive for malignancy. All patients underwent hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes dissection according to the AJCC lymph node map (nodal stations 2R, 4R, 7, 8 and 9 for a right-sided tumour; 4L, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 for a left-sided tumour) after resection of the main tumour. Histologic nodal assessment results were used as reference standards. Of these 55 patients, 10 (20%) had a past history of pulmonary tuberculosis as determined by clinical or imaging studies.
Results:
Of 230 mediastinal nodal stations evaluated in 46 patients, 5(2%) stations in 4(8%) patients proved to be malignant by histopathologic assessment. Mean number of lymph node stations evaluated were 5. On a per-nodal station basis, the overall sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, PPV, NPV of PET-CT were 60%, 97%, 96%, 38%,99% for mediastinal lymph nodes staging(N2) respectively.
Conclusion:
Integrated PET-CT provides high specificity and high accuracy, but low sensitivity for mediastinal staging of NSCLCs. The high specificity is achieved at the expense of sensitivity by interpreting calcified nodes or nodes with high attenuation at CT, even with high FDG uptake at PET, as benign in a tuberculosis-endemic region.
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P1.03-073 - Predictors for Pathological N1 and N2 Disease in Clinical N1 Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer (ID 3938)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Fukui, T. Okasaka, K. Kawaguchi, K. Fukumoto, S. Nakamura, S. Hakiri, N. Ozeki, K. Yokoi
- Abstract
Background:
Patients with clinical N1 (cN1) non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is usually considered to be candidates for curative resection. However, they sometimes have unexpected mediastinal nodal involvement (pN2). To avoid futile pulmonary resection, accurate preoperative evaluation of nodal status would be necessary. The purpose of this study was to identify predictors for lymph node metastasis in cN1 NSCLC patients.
Methods:
We retrospectively reviewed data on the clinicopathological and radiological features of 170 patients with cN1 NSCLC who had undergone complete resection at Nagoya University Hospital between 2004 and 2015. Hilar and/or intrapulmonary lymph nodes with ≥ 1.0 cm in the short axis on computed tomography or with high accumulation of [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) in positron emission tomography compared with that of the adjacent mediastinal tissue were considered as cN1 in our institution. The association between clinicoradiological variables and nodal status was analyzed to identify predictors for lymph node metastasis.
Results:
The cohort consisted of 125 males and 45 females, ranging in age 39 to 84 years. There were 62 (36%) adenocarcinomas, 82 (48%) squamous-cell carcinomas, 10 (6%) large-cell carcinomas, and 16 (10%) other types of cancers. The breakdown by pathological N category was 61 (36%) pN0, 72 (42%) pN1, and 37 (22%) pN2 patients. Among pN2 patients, only three showed negative N1 lymph nodes (skip pN2 metastasis). Female gender, adenocarcinoma histology, middle or lower lobe orign and positive N1 lymph node (pN1) were significantly associated with pN2 by univariate analysis. Logistic regression analysis showed that the female and pN1 were significant predictor for pN2 with the odds ratio of 3.0 and 13.1, respectively (P = 0.02 and 0.0001, respectively). In addition, using the 63 patients extracted from our cohort of this study, we sought the predictor of pN1. The maximum size of the lymph node and standardized uptake value of the FDG were significant factor for pN1 with the cut-off value of 1.3 cm and 4.28, respectively.
Conclusion:
Female gender and pN1 was significantly assosiated with pN2 in cN1 NSCLC patients of our cohort. The large size and a high accumulation of FDG of hilar or intrapulmonary lymph node might predict the pN1.
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- Abstract
Background:
The aims of this study were to investigate the correlation between [8]F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) uptake of the primary tumor and mediastinal lymph node metastasis (MLNM) in lung adenocarcinoma, and to improve the diagnostic capability of tumor FDG uptake and other risk factors in predicting occult MLNM preoperatively.
Methods:
We reviewed 360 consecutive pulmonary adenocarcinoma patients who underwent preoperative PET/CT scan and subsequent surgery. Resected tumors were classified according to the 2011 IASLC/ATS/ERS classification. Univariate and multivariate analysis were conducted to evaluate the associations between clinicopathological variables and MLNM. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was performed to quantify the predictive value of these factors.
Results:
Of all the 360 patients, 54 were pathological N2 diseases. On univariate analysis, CEA level, nodule type, nodal SUVmax, tumor SUVmax, size, location and histologic subtype were associated with MLNM. On multivariate analysis, CEA≥5.0 ng/ml (p < 0.001), solid nodule (p = 0.012), tumor SUVmax ≥ 3.7 (p < 0.027), nodal SUVmax ≥ 2.0 (p < 0.001) and centrally located tumors (p = 0.035) were independent risk factors that associated with MLNM. The area under the ROC curve (AUC) for tumor SUVmax in predicting MLNM was 0.764 and AUC of nodal SUVmax was 0.730. The combined use of five factors yielded a higher AUC of 0.885 for N2 disease. The tumor SUVmax among histologic subtypes differed significantly (p < 0.001).
Conclusion:
Primary tumor SUVmax of PET/CT was shown a good predictor for MLNM in patients with lung adenocarcinoma, and the underlying mechanism may attribute to the close association between tumor FDG uptake and IASLC/ATS/ERS adenocarcinoma subtypes. The combined use of tumor SUVmax with factors like nodal SUVmax, solid nodule, centrally located tumor and increased CEA level improved the diagnostic capacity for predicting N2 disease preoperatively.
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P1.03-075 - Predictive Factors for Minimal Pleural Disease Detected at Thoracotomy or Positive Lavage Cytology (ID 5976)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Sakurada, F. Hoshi, Y. Okada
- Abstract
Background:
Minimal pleural disseminations and malignant pleural effusion is eventually diagnosed at the therapeutic thoracotomy. Pleural lavage cytology is another prognostic factor which is available through surgery. Although CT image have become high quality, prediction of such pleural disease is still difficult. To establish predictive markers for minimal pleural disease before surgery will be useful for planning strategy for the patients with minimal pleural disease.
Methods:
115 patients who underwent pulmonary resection in our hospital from January 2010 to December 2011 were retrospectively analyzed for their clinicopathological information such as tumor marker CT image, and histology. 65 were male and 50 female. Histology was squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and other histology for 32, 78, and 5 cases, respectively. Clinical staging according to WHO 7[th] edition stage IA, IB, IIA, IIB, and IIIA for 62, 31, 11, 3, and 8 cases, respectively. CT findings such as pleural indentation and contact of tumor on pleura were carefully measured on thin-slice CT sections with 0.5-1mm pitch. P value less than 0.05 was regarded as statistically significance.
Results:
Eight cases were positive for pleural disease, one for malignant effusion, 2 for minimal dissemination, and 6 for pleural lavage cytology. By statistical analysis regarding association between clinicopathological factors pleural disease, statistical positive factor was tumor diameter and CEA positivity (P=0.037 and 0.01, respectively), but tumor contact on pleura did not reach statistical significance (p=0.07). Pleural indentation and histologic type was not statistically significant.
Conclusion:
Based on current study, tumor diameter and serum CEA level could be possible predictive factors for minimal pleural disease. Upon limited number of patients, further study will be needed.
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P1.03-076 - Nodal Staging of Patients with Pulmonary Malignancies - The Predictive Value of Different Patterns of Mediastinal 18FDG-PET Activity (ID 5928)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.-. Angelides, A.-. Markewycz
- Abstract
Background:
In patients with pulmonary malignancies, 18FDG uptake in mediastinal nodes is a sensitive but non-specific indicator of metastatic disease. The pattern of tracer uptake may improve the predictability of such findings.
Methods:
Aim: To retrospectively i) compare 18FDG-PET scans and EBUS findings in patients with documented pulmonary malignancies; and, ii) compare the pattern of 18FDG uptake in mediastinal nodes in patients with / without documented mediastinal node metastases. Methods: 62 patients with documented pulmonary malignancies underwent 18FDG-PET scintigraphy followed by EBUS within the ensuing 3 weeks. One-two nodes were assessed in each patient, determined by 18FDG-PET findings and accessibility of the FDG-positive nodes. The mediastinal nodal status from each procedure was compared.
Results:
Results: EBUS resulted in mediastinal nodal status downgrading in 25 (40%) patients. No upgrading was noted. Downgrading most likely occurred when there several non-enlarged lymph nodes of similar 18FDG-avidity distributed randomly and bilaterally in the mediastinum, often with bilateral hilar uptake (17 of 25 patients). Further, only 2 of 19 patients exhibiting such a pattern of mediastinal tracer distribution were found to have lymph node metastases (10%), and both had metastatic disease elsewhere on the PET scan. 21 of 23 patients with positive EBUS findings demonstrated discrete 18FDG-avid lymph nodes ipsilaterally, with minimal-to-no 18FDG-avid nodes contralaterally. EBUS findings in 14 (23%) patients were inconclusive, despite multiple sampling. Enlarged, rounded lymph nodes with avid FDG uptake (SUV>4) were also more likely to harbour metastatic disease. Conversely, a Hounsfield unit of >55 was associated with benign disease.
Conclusion:
Conclusion: The pattern of mediastinal 18FDG uptake was highly predictive of metastatic disease, and may circumvent the need for EBUS evaluation. Prospective analysis of these parameters will be undertaken.
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P1.03-077 - Analysis of the Early CDT-Blood Biomarker for Lung Cancer in Higher vs. Lower Risk Cohorts (ID 5079)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): M. Ohillips, D. Rollins, D. Dyer, J. Kern, J. Jett, J.H. Finigan
- Abstract
Background:
The Early Cancer Detection Test (CDT)-Lung Cancer Screening (LCS) Study is a prospective, lung cancer screening study testing the hypothesis that a serum biomarker consisting of a panel of seven cancer-associated autoantibodies, in combination with a low-dose CT (LDCT), would increase detection of early stage lung cancer. We analyzed nodules rates and lung cancer in “higher risk” individuals who meet the USPSTF LCS criteria (http://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Document/UpdateSummaryFinal/lung-cancer-screening) and “lower risk” individuals who do not meet these criteria.
Methods:
The EarlyCDT LCS study eligibility criteria included persons 50-75 years of age, current or former smokers of ≥ 20 pack years, former smokers have ˂ 10 years since quit smoking. Additionally, those with a history of lung cancer in first-degree relative(s) and any history of smoking were also included. Exclusion criteria included any history of cancer within 10 years (except skin cancer), any use of oxygen, or life expectancy < 5 years. The EarlyCDT-Lung test was considered positive if any one of the seven autoantibodies was positive.
Results:
From May 2012 through June 2016, 1235 individuals were enrolled (final target 1600). The median age was 59 years, 55% were female and 45% were male. Fifty-two per cent were current smokers while 48% were former smokers. Fifty-three percent of participants were higher risk and 47% were lower risk. The EarlyCDT-Lung was positive in 8% of higher risk individuals and 6% of lower risk individuals. Thirty-five per cent of higher risk individuals had nodules on LDCT while 27% of lower risk participants had nodules on LDCT. The EarlyCDT-Lung blood test was positive in 91 patients, 77 were higher risk and 34 were lower risk. There were 7 lung cancers, all in the higher risk group, resulting in a lung cancer rate of 1.07% in the higher risk group. The median pack years of individuals with lung cancer was 60 and the median age was 64 years. Two of the 7 lung cancer patients were positive for the EarlyCDT test. The relative risk of lung cancer in patients with a positive EarlyCDT test was 5.5 for the entire cohort and 4.5 for the higher risk group for lung cancer.
Conclusion:
There were more total nodules in the higher risk group compared to the lower risk group. There were more lung cancers in the higher risk group compared with the lower risk group. A positive EarlyCDT test is associated with an increased risk of lung cancer.
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P1.03-078 - Size Matters...but Don't Underestimate the Power of Morphology (ID 4181)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): A. Snoeckx, D. Desbuquoit, M.J. Spinhoven, A. Janssens, P. Lauwers, M. De Waele, C. De Pooter, P. Pauwels, J.P. Van Meerbeeck, P.M. Parizel
- Abstract
Background:
The detection of solitary pulmonary nodules has increased due to the widespread use of Computed Tomography (CT) and will increase even more in the future when lung cancer screening will be embedded in daily practice. In addition to the clinical information, size is one of the most important parameters to assess the likelihood of malignancy. Although there is a considerable overlap in imaging characteristics of benign and malignant solitary pulmonary nodules, the power of morphology –even in small nodules- should not be underestimated. The aim of this pictorial essay is to give an overview of the wide range of morphologic characteristics and to address the available evidence on sensitivity and specificity of these characteristics.
Methods:
Cases presented were collected during the Multidisciplinary Thoracic Oncology Tumor Board between January 2014 and May 2016. All malignant cases have histopathologic proof, whereas benign lesions were included when the benign nature was suggested after follow-up, negative PET-scan and/or multidisciplinary consensus.
Results:
With regard to margin characteristics, spiculation is highly suggestive of a malignant nature. It is the only feature that is incorporated as ‘morphologic’ variable in most risk prediction models. Other features however may also be strong indicators of malignancy. Lobulation, halo sign, pleural indentation, vascular convergence sign and pitfall sign are frequently encountered in malignant nodules. The nodule-bronchus relationship can give additional information regarding the nature of the nodule, with signs such as air bronchogram, bubble like lucencies and bronchus cutoff sign being indicative of a malignant nature. In cavitated nodules, a very thin wall might indicate a benign cause, whereas a very thick wall is more common in malignant nodules. Calcification is typically seen in benign nodules, but depending on the calcification pattern a malignant etiology cannot be excluded. The presence of fat is a relative reliable sign of benignity. Thin-section CT will enable detection of subtle findings. Nodules rarely present with only one characteristic and combination of findings can definitely increase the likelihood of a correct diagnosis.
Conclusion:
The management of solitary pulmonary nodules involves both clinical and imaging assessment. Although a great overlap exists in morphologic features of benign and malignant nodules, thorough knowledge and recognition of subtle morphologic findings will aid in early detection of nodules with a high likelihood of malignancy and will avoid unnecessary follow-up and delay in diagnosis and treatment.
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P1.03-079 - Adequacy of Percutaneous Lung Biopsy for Assessing Clinically Requested Genetic Mutations in Lung Cancer (ID 6302)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): S.H. Sabir, L.M. Frota Lima
- Abstract
Background:
Percutaneous lung biopsy is used to assess for the presence of actionable genetic mutations in EGFR, BRAF and KRAS. ALK mutation was assessed separately through FISH, which was not assessed in this study. Sequencing can be performed with next generation sequencing (NGS) or single gene sequencing (SGS).
Methods:
A retrospective study with 188 consecutive histologically diagnostic CT guided lung biopsies sent for NGS were performed between 2013 and 2014. Procedures were performed using 19 gauge guiding cannula, 20 gauge side-cutting core needles and 22 gauge Chiba FNA needles. Patients in whom 2 or more gene mutation analyses were requested had their biopsy specimen analyzed for adequate tumor cellularity (>20% tumor) and if adequate had DNA extracted and sequenced with a 50-gene multiplex platform (Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine). If the material was not adequate for NGS, the requested genes mutation analyses were performed with SGS. Demographics, procedure technique as well as lesion features were collected. Descriptive statistics were tabulated and chi-square statistical analysis performed.
Results:
57.44% of the patients were female, with average age of 67 years (35-91) and 65.42% had history of smoking. Lesion size varied from 0.8 cm to 15.6 cm, with average of 3.9 cm. 83.51% were spiculated, 78.72% solid, 12.23% presented intralesional low attenuation (<20HU), 11.17% were associated with perilesional atelectasis and 19.14% with pleural effusion. 63.83% had known metastasis at the time of the procedure, 29.78% had systemic treatment before the biopsy. Specimens were successfully used for NGS in 80.52% of cases. Overall adequacy of biopsy specimens for analysis of gene mutations requested was 87.76%.
Conclusion:
The overall success rate of percutaneous image guided lung cancer biopsies for clinically requested genetic mutation analysis was 87.76%.
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- Abstract
Background:
Differentiation between separate primary lung cancers and intrapulmonary metastases (IM) has significant therapeutic and prognostic implications in lung cancer patients with multiple pulmonary nodules. In this retrospective study, we investigated the diagnostic ability of ratio (MSR) and differences (MSD) of maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmax) between two tumors in discriminating separate primary lung cancers from metastases.
Methods:
We evaluated 5641 lung cancer patients between March 2009 and March 2016 at the Chinese People's Liberation Army General Hospital. Patients underwent PET/CT and pathology confirmed as multiple lung cancers were included. Patients with ground glass opacity lung cancers or underwent preoperative radiotherapy or chemotherapy were excluded. All lung cancers tissues were reassessed and discriminated from separate primary lung cancer to metastases by two pathologists independently according to comprehensive histological assessment criteria, which was proposed by IASLC lung cancer staging project as pathologic definition to distinguish multiple primary lung cancers from metastatic in the forthcoming eighth edition TNM classification of lung cancer. The MSR and MSD were determined and compared in diagnosing separate primary lung cancers. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was performed to determine the area under the curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity with an optimal cut-off value. Example of MSR and MSD deduction was given in Figure. 1. Figure 1
Results:
Totally 24 patients with 24 pairs-tumor (18 primary, 6 metastases) were included. The area under the curve of MSR (AUC, 0.843; 95% CI, 0.637-0.958; p=0.001) was significantly higher than MSD (AUC, 0.685; 95% CI, 0.465–0.857; p=0.240) with p value 0.022. The optimal cut-off value for MSR and MSD was 1.61 (83.33% sensitivity, 83.33% specificity) and 1.94 (83.33% sensitivity, 66.67% specificity).
Conclusion:
The MSR from PET/CT may helpful in differentiating separate primary lung cancers from intrapulmonary metastases and larger studies were needed to confirm this result.
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- Abstract
Background:
Synchronous primary malignant tumors are relatively rare. The accurate diagnosis remains challenging.
Methods:
We report a case of synchronous triple primary tumors of the right lung in a 64-year-old male patient in whom each tumor presented distinct CT imaging findings. Abnormal nodules were found in the lung(one in right upper lobe and another in the right lower lobe). Almost 2 years later, Chest CT revealed that the nodule in the right lower lobe had grown. After complete resection, pathological sections revealed the similar pathological features of two adenocarcinomas. As the L858R mutation within exon 21 of the EGFR gene was identified in the lower lobe tumor but not in the upper-lobe tumor, we diagnosed as double primary lung adenocarcinomas. We performed the right lower lobe tumor. Pathological examination revealed a combined adenocarcinoma and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. Figure 1
Results:
This is the first case of triple malignant tumors (two lung adenocarcinomas, and MALT lymphoma) reported in the literature.
Conclusion:
Because of its rarity, MALT lymphoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis when we encounter abnormal nodules in patients with synchronous malignant tumors of the Lung.Mutational analysis of the EGFR gene provided important information not only in decision-making of selection of chemotherapeutic agent but also in the diagnosis of double primary cancers.
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P1.03-082 - 18F-FDG PET/CT Value Staging NSCLC Extension to the Lymph Nodes, Single Center Experience (ID 6118)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): R. Vosyliute, G. Visockyte, D. Vajauskas
- Abstract
Background:
Non small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) is the most common type of lung cancer. Correct clinical and pathological lymphnode (N) staging is critical for choosing the best treatment. Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), being non-invasive pre-operative diagnostic method is becoming increasingly popular. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the accuracy same as false-negative and false-positive results of PET/CT when compared to histopathological diagnoses at Vilnius university hospital Santariskiu klinikos (VUL SK).
Methods:
A retrospective analysis included 15 NSCLC patients who underwent preoperative PET/CT scan and postoperative histopathological analysis for the N staging at VUL SK. PET/CT N stage was compared with gold standard histopathological N stage to assess the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values for N staging of NSCLC.
Results:
There were 15 patients (11 men (73,3%), 4 women (26,7%)) with average age of 66,1±10,2 years included into the study. Ten patients (66,7%) were staged N>0 by PET/CT, histopathological analysis confirmed 4 diagnoses (40%), other 6 diagnoses (60%) were considered false positive. Five patients (33,3%) were staged N0 by PET/CT, histopathological analysis confirmed 3 diagnoses (60%), other 2 diagnoses (40%) were false negative. Estimated specificity of PET/CT for N staging of NSCLC was 25%; sensitivity – 57,14%, positive predictive value – 40%, negative predictive value – 60%.
Conclusion:
Despite many advantages, PET/CT still has limited value staging NSCLC. Significant number of inaccuracies in N staging may occur evaluating inflammatory lymph nodes. The necessity of histologic confirmation of N stage in stage I-IIIa NSCLC is crucial as these patients may have surgical treatment combination and better outcomes.
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P1.03-083 - Advances in Surgical Staging of NSCLC (ID 5796)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): P. Balakrishnan, S. Galvin, B. Mahon, J. Riordan, J. McGiven
- Abstract
Background:
Staging of mediastinal lymph nodes in NSCLC defines the extent of thoracic malignancies & the disease process . It is based on the American Joint Committee for Cancer (AJCC) , TNM staging system , which describes the best anatomic extent of the disease . This defines operability & surgical resectibility , neoadjuvant therapy & prediciting prognostic survivability .
Methods:
A well-conducted literacture search & review undertaken . All papers or studies in the last 10 years were identified and studied .
Results:
Surgical & non-surgical staging methods were identified , compared and analysed for their sensitivity & specificity . Size , location & characteristics of tumour , local invasion or extension , lymphadenopathy & metastatic disease spread were identified as parameters .
Conclusion:
Early accurate staging improves overall outcomes if therapeutic interventions are well-organised & excuted in a timely fashion . Careful selection of staging methods is crucial .
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P1.03-084 - Implications of 8th Edition TNM Proposal: Invasive vs. Total Size for T Descriptor in pT1a-2bN0M0 Lung Adenocarcinoma (ID 5788)
14:30 - 15:45 | Author(s): T. Eguchi, K. Kameda, S. Lu, Z. Tano, J. Huang, D. Jones, P.S. Adusumilli, W.D. Travis
- Abstract
Background:
The aim of this study was to conduct a clinicopathological comparative analysis of total tumor versus invasive tumor size in pT1a-2bN0M0 nonmucinous lung adenocarcinomas.
Methods:
Resected pT1a-2bN0M0 lung adenocarcinomas (1995-2012) based on 8th edition of TNM classification using total (N=1475) and invasive tumor size (N=1482) were included. Recurrence free probability [RFP] and lung cancer-specific survival [LCSS]) were compared between both pT-staging systems using Kaplan-Meier method.
Results:
Use of invasive size for the T descriptor increased the number of pT1a tumors by 2 fold compared to use of total tumor size (316 vs. 161), with no difference in RFP and LCSS (RFP, 82% vs. 80%; LCSS, 94% vs. 93%). Use of invasive rather than total size also showed better stratification of lymphatic/vascular invasion and high-grade histological subtypes according to increasing pT stage. RFP and LCSS in invasive-size-based pT2b were lower than those in total-size-based pT2b (RFP, 44% vs. 60%; LCSS, 69% vs. 77%).
Conclusion:
In pT1a-2bN0M0 nonmucinous lung adenocarcinoma, the 8th edition TNM proposal to use invasive rather than total size for the pT descriptor gives better prognostic discrimination by capturing a larger number of patients with favorable prognosis (pT1a) and providing better stratification for pT2b. Figure 1 Figure 2