TY - JOUR
T1 - Mutational analysis of multiple lung cancers
T2 - Discrimination between primary and metastatic lung cancers by genomic profile
AU - Goto, Taichiro
AU - Hirotsu, Yosuke
AU - Mochizuki, Hitoshi
AU - Nakagomi, Takahiro
AU - Shikata, Daichi
AU - Yokoyama, Yujiro
AU - Oyama, Toshio
AU - Amemiya, Kenji
AU - Okimoto, Kenichiro
AU - Omata, Masao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Goto et al.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - In cases of multiple lung cancers, individual tumors may represent either a primary lung cancer or both primary and metastatic lung cancers. Treatment selection varies depending on such features, and this discrimination is critically important in predicting prognosis. The present study was undertaken to determine the efficacy and validity of mutation analysis as a means of determining whether multiple lung cancers are primary or metastatic in nature. The study involved 12 patients who underwent surgery in our department for multiple lung cancers between July 2014 and March 2016. Tumor cells were collected from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues of the primary lesions by using laser capture microdissection, and targeted sequencing of 53 lung cancer-related genes was performed. In surgically treated patients with multiple lung cancers, the driver mutation profile differed among the individual tumors. Meanwhile, in a case of a solitary lung tumor that appeared after surgery for double primary lung cancers, gene mutation analysis using a bronchoscopic biopsy sample revealed a gene mutation profile consistent with the surgically resected specimen, thus demonstrating that the tumor in this case was metastatic. In cases of multiple lung cancers, the comparison of driver mutation profiles clarifies the clonal origin of the tumors and enables discrimination between primary and metastatic tumors.
AB - In cases of multiple lung cancers, individual tumors may represent either a primary lung cancer or both primary and metastatic lung cancers. Treatment selection varies depending on such features, and this discrimination is critically important in predicting prognosis. The present study was undertaken to determine the efficacy and validity of mutation analysis as a means of determining whether multiple lung cancers are primary or metastatic in nature. The study involved 12 patients who underwent surgery in our department for multiple lung cancers between July 2014 and March 2016. Tumor cells were collected from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues of the primary lesions by using laser capture microdissection, and targeted sequencing of 53 lung cancer-related genes was performed. In surgically treated patients with multiple lung cancers, the driver mutation profile differed among the individual tumors. Meanwhile, in a case of a solitary lung tumor that appeared after surgery for double primary lung cancers, gene mutation analysis using a bronchoscopic biopsy sample revealed a gene mutation profile consistent with the surgically resected specimen, thus demonstrating that the tumor in this case was metastatic. In cases of multiple lung cancers, the comparison of driver mutation profiles clarifies the clonal origin of the tumors and enables discrimination between primary and metastatic tumors.
KW - Lung cancer
KW - Metastasis
KW - Multiple cancers
KW - Mutation
KW - Next-generation sequencing
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U2 - 10.18632/oncotarget.16096
DO - 10.18632/oncotarget.16096
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85019156044
SN - 1949-2553
VL - 8
SP - 31133
EP - 31143
JO - Oncotarget
JF - Oncotarget
IS - 19
ER -