Cargando…

Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)

Selection of lung cancer patients for therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors directed at EGFR requires the identification of specific EGFR mutations. In most patients with advanced, inoperable lung carcinoma limited tumor samples often represent the only material available for both histologic typin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: de Biase, Dario, Visani, Michela, Malapelle, Umberto, Simonato, Francesca, Cesari, Valentina, Bellevicine, Claudio, Pession, Annalisa, Troncone, Giancarlo, Fassina, Ambrogio, Tallini, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3871524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24376723
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083607
_version_ 1782296826843496448
author de Biase, Dario
Visani, Michela
Malapelle, Umberto
Simonato, Francesca
Cesari, Valentina
Bellevicine, Claudio
Pession, Annalisa
Troncone, Giancarlo
Fassina, Ambrogio
Tallini, Giovanni
author_facet de Biase, Dario
Visani, Michela
Malapelle, Umberto
Simonato, Francesca
Cesari, Valentina
Bellevicine, Claudio
Pession, Annalisa
Troncone, Giancarlo
Fassina, Ambrogio
Tallini, Giovanni
author_sort de Biase, Dario
collection PubMed
description Selection of lung cancer patients for therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors directed at EGFR requires the identification of specific EGFR mutations. In most patients with advanced, inoperable lung carcinoma limited tumor samples often represent the only material available for both histologic typing and molecular analysis. We defined a next generation sequencing protocol targeted to EGFR exons 18-21 suitable for the routine diagnosis of such clinical samples. The protocol was validated in an unselected series of 80 small biopsies (n=14) and cytology (n=66) specimens representative of the material ordinarily submitted for diagnostic evaluation to three referral medical centers in Italy. Specimens were systematically evaluated for tumor cell number and proportion relative to non-neoplastic cells. They were analyzed in batches of 100-150 amplicons per run, reaching an analytical sensitivity of 1% and obtaining an adequate number of reads, to cover all exons on all samples analyzed. Next generation sequencing was compared with Sanger sequencing. The latter identified 15 EGFR mutations in 14/80 cases (17.5%) but did not detected mutations when the proportion of neoplastic cells was below 40%. Next generation sequencing identified 31 EGFR mutations in 24/80 cases (30.0%). Mutations were detected with a proportion of neoplastic cells as low as 5%. All mutations identified by the Sanger method were confirmed. In 6 cases next generation sequencing identified exon 19 deletions or the L858R mutation not seen after Sanger sequencing, allowing the patient to be treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. In one additional case the R831H mutation associated with treatment resistance was identified in an EGFR wild type tumor after Sanger sequencing. Next generation sequencing is robust, cost-effective and greatly improves the detection of EGFR mutations. Its use should be promoted for the clinical diagnosis of mutations in specimens with unfavorable tumor cell content.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3871524
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-38715242013-12-27 Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy) de Biase, Dario Visani, Michela Malapelle, Umberto Simonato, Francesca Cesari, Valentina Bellevicine, Claudio Pession, Annalisa Troncone, Giancarlo Fassina, Ambrogio Tallini, Giovanni PLoS One Research Article Selection of lung cancer patients for therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors directed at EGFR requires the identification of specific EGFR mutations. In most patients with advanced, inoperable lung carcinoma limited tumor samples often represent the only material available for both histologic typing and molecular analysis. We defined a next generation sequencing protocol targeted to EGFR exons 18-21 suitable for the routine diagnosis of such clinical samples. The protocol was validated in an unselected series of 80 small biopsies (n=14) and cytology (n=66) specimens representative of the material ordinarily submitted for diagnostic evaluation to three referral medical centers in Italy. Specimens were systematically evaluated for tumor cell number and proportion relative to non-neoplastic cells. They were analyzed in batches of 100-150 amplicons per run, reaching an analytical sensitivity of 1% and obtaining an adequate number of reads, to cover all exons on all samples analyzed. Next generation sequencing was compared with Sanger sequencing. The latter identified 15 EGFR mutations in 14/80 cases (17.5%) but did not detected mutations when the proportion of neoplastic cells was below 40%. Next generation sequencing identified 31 EGFR mutations in 24/80 cases (30.0%). Mutations were detected with a proportion of neoplastic cells as low as 5%. All mutations identified by the Sanger method were confirmed. In 6 cases next generation sequencing identified exon 19 deletions or the L858R mutation not seen after Sanger sequencing, allowing the patient to be treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. In one additional case the R831H mutation associated with treatment resistance was identified in an EGFR wild type tumor after Sanger sequencing. Next generation sequencing is robust, cost-effective and greatly improves the detection of EGFR mutations. Its use should be promoted for the clinical diagnosis of mutations in specimens with unfavorable tumor cell content. Public Library of Science 2013-12-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3871524/ /pubmed/24376723 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083607 Text en © 2013 de Biase et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
de Biase, Dario
Visani, Michela
Malapelle, Umberto
Simonato, Francesca
Cesari, Valentina
Bellevicine, Claudio
Pession, Annalisa
Troncone, Giancarlo
Fassina, Ambrogio
Tallini, Giovanni
Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title_full Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title_fullStr Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title_full_unstemmed Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title_short Next-Generation Sequencing of Lung Cancer EGFR Exons 18-21 Allows Effective Molecular Diagnosis of Small Routine Samples (Cytology and Biopsy)
title_sort next-generation sequencing of lung cancer egfr exons 18-21 allows effective molecular diagnosis of small routine samples (cytology and biopsy)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3871524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24376723
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083607
work_keys_str_mv AT debiasedario nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT visanimichela nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT malapelleumberto nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT simonatofrancesca nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT cesarivalentina nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT bellevicineclaudio nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT pessionannalisa nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT tronconegiancarlo nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT fassinaambrogio nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy
AT tallinigiovanni nextgenerationsequencingoflungcanceregfrexons1821allowseffectivemoleculardiagnosisofsmallroutinesamplescytologyandbiopsy