Cargando…

VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer

AIM: VE1 is a monoclonal antibody detecting mutant BRAF(V600E) protein by immunohistochemistry. Here we aim to determine the inter-observer agreement and concordance of VE1 with mutational status, investigate heterogeneity in colorectal cancers and metastases and determine the prognostic effect of V...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schafroth, Christian, Galván, José A., Centeno, Irene, Koelzer, Viktor H., Dawson, Heather E., Sokol, Lena, Rieger, Gregor, Berger, Martin D., Hädrich, Marion, Rosenberg, Robert, Nitsche, Ulrich, Schnüriger, Beat, Langer, Rupert, Inderbitzin, Daniel, Lugli, Alessandro, Zlobec, Inti
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4747166/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26496026
_version_ 1782414927766487040
author Schafroth, Christian
Galván, José A.
Centeno, Irene
Koelzer, Viktor H.
Dawson, Heather E.
Sokol, Lena
Rieger, Gregor
Berger, Martin D.
Hädrich, Marion
Rosenberg, Robert
Nitsche, Ulrich
Schnüriger, Beat
Langer, Rupert
Inderbitzin, Daniel
Lugli, Alessandro
Zlobec, Inti
author_facet Schafroth, Christian
Galván, José A.
Centeno, Irene
Koelzer, Viktor H.
Dawson, Heather E.
Sokol, Lena
Rieger, Gregor
Berger, Martin D.
Hädrich, Marion
Rosenberg, Robert
Nitsche, Ulrich
Schnüriger, Beat
Langer, Rupert
Inderbitzin, Daniel
Lugli, Alessandro
Zlobec, Inti
author_sort Schafroth, Christian
collection PubMed
description AIM: VE1 is a monoclonal antibody detecting mutant BRAF(V600E) protein by immunohistochemistry. Here we aim to determine the inter-observer agreement and concordance of VE1 with mutational status, investigate heterogeneity in colorectal cancers and metastases and determine the prognostic effect of VE1 in colorectal cancer patients. METHODS: Concordance of VE1 with mutational status and inter-observer agreement were tested on a pilot cohort of colorectal cancers (n = 34), melanomas (n = 23) and thyroid cancers (n = 8). Two prognostic cohorts were evaluated (n = 259, Cohort 1 and n = 226, Cohort 2) by multiple-punch tissue microarrays. VE1 staining on preoperative biopsies (n = 118 patients) was compared to expression in resections. Primary tumors and metastases from 13 patients were tested for VE1 heterogeneity using a tissue microarray generated from all available blocks (n = 100 blocks). RESULTS: Inter-observer agreement was 100% (kappa = 1.0). Concordance between VE1 and V600E mutation was 98.5%. Cohort 1: VE1 positivity (seen in 13.5%) was associated with older age (p = 0.0175) and MLH1 deficiency (p < 0.0001). Cohort 2: VE1 positivity (seen in 12.8%) was associated with female gender (p = 0.0016), right-sided tumor location (p < 0.0001), higher tumor grade (p < 0.0001) and mismatch repair (MMR)-deficiency (p < 0.0001). In survival analysis, MMR status and postoperative therapy were identified as possible confounding factors. Adjusting for these features, VE1 was an unfavorable prognostic factor. Preoperative biopsy staining matched resections in all cases except one. No heterogeneity was found across any primary/metastatic tumor blocks. CONCLUSION: VE1 is highly concordant for V600E and homogeneously expressed suggesting staining can be analysed on resection specimens, preoperative biopsies, metastatic lesions and tissue microarrays.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4747166
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Impact Journals LLC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-47471662016-03-25 VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer Schafroth, Christian Galván, José A. Centeno, Irene Koelzer, Viktor H. Dawson, Heather E. Sokol, Lena Rieger, Gregor Berger, Martin D. Hädrich, Marion Rosenberg, Robert Nitsche, Ulrich Schnüriger, Beat Langer, Rupert Inderbitzin, Daniel Lugli, Alessandro Zlobec, Inti Oncotarget Research Paper: Pathology AIM: VE1 is a monoclonal antibody detecting mutant BRAF(V600E) protein by immunohistochemistry. Here we aim to determine the inter-observer agreement and concordance of VE1 with mutational status, investigate heterogeneity in colorectal cancers and metastases and determine the prognostic effect of VE1 in colorectal cancer patients. METHODS: Concordance of VE1 with mutational status and inter-observer agreement were tested on a pilot cohort of colorectal cancers (n = 34), melanomas (n = 23) and thyroid cancers (n = 8). Two prognostic cohorts were evaluated (n = 259, Cohort 1 and n = 226, Cohort 2) by multiple-punch tissue microarrays. VE1 staining on preoperative biopsies (n = 118 patients) was compared to expression in resections. Primary tumors and metastases from 13 patients were tested for VE1 heterogeneity using a tissue microarray generated from all available blocks (n = 100 blocks). RESULTS: Inter-observer agreement was 100% (kappa = 1.0). Concordance between VE1 and V600E mutation was 98.5%. Cohort 1: VE1 positivity (seen in 13.5%) was associated with older age (p = 0.0175) and MLH1 deficiency (p < 0.0001). Cohort 2: VE1 positivity (seen in 12.8%) was associated with female gender (p = 0.0016), right-sided tumor location (p < 0.0001), higher tumor grade (p < 0.0001) and mismatch repair (MMR)-deficiency (p < 0.0001). In survival analysis, MMR status and postoperative therapy were identified as possible confounding factors. Adjusting for these features, VE1 was an unfavorable prognostic factor. Preoperative biopsy staining matched resections in all cases except one. No heterogeneity was found across any primary/metastatic tumor blocks. CONCLUSION: VE1 is highly concordant for V600E and homogeneously expressed suggesting staining can be analysed on resection specimens, preoperative biopsies, metastatic lesions and tissue microarrays. Impact Journals LLC 2015-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4747166/ /pubmed/26496026 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Schafroth et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper: Pathology
Schafroth, Christian
Galván, José A.
Centeno, Irene
Koelzer, Viktor H.
Dawson, Heather E.
Sokol, Lena
Rieger, Gregor
Berger, Martin D.
Hädrich, Marion
Rosenberg, Robert
Nitsche, Ulrich
Schnüriger, Beat
Langer, Rupert
Inderbitzin, Daniel
Lugli, Alessandro
Zlobec, Inti
VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title_full VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title_fullStr VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title_full_unstemmed VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title_short VE1 immunohistochemistry predicts BRAF V600E mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
title_sort ve1 immunohistochemistry predicts braf v600e mutation status and clinical outcome in colorectal cancer
topic Research Paper: Pathology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4747166/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26496026
work_keys_str_mv AT schafrothchristian ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT galvanjosea ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT centenoirene ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT koelzerviktorh ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT dawsonheathere ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT sokollena ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT riegergregor ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT bergermartind ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT hadrichmarion ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT rosenbergrobert ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT nitscheulrich ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT schnurigerbeat ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT langerrupert ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT inderbitzindaniel ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT luglialessandro ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer
AT zlobecinti ve1immunohistochemistrypredictsbrafv600emutationstatusandclinicaloutcomeincolorectalcancer