| Literature DB >> 16911776 |
Abstract
DNA fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technology is used to study chromosomal and genomic changes in fixed cell suspensions and tissue block preparations. The technique is based on specific hybridization of small labeled DNA fragments, the probes, to complementary sequences in a target DNA molecule. Demand for FISH assays in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues has been increasing, mainly in conditions in which diagnosis is not achieved in cell smears or tissue imprints, such as solid tumors. Moreover, the development of molecular targeted therapies in oncology has expanded the applicability of tests to predict sensitivity or resistance to these agents. The efficient use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) as therapeutical agents in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) depends on identification of patients likely to show clinical benefit from these specific treatments. The EGFR gene copy number determined by FISH has been demonstrated as an effective predictor of outcome from NSCLC patients to EGFR TKIs; however there are pending challenges for standardization of laboratory procedures and definition of the scoring system. This methodology article focuses on the EGFR FISH assay. It details the scoring system used in the studies conducted at the University of Colorado Cancer Center in which a significant association was found between increased EGFR copy numbers and clinical outcome to TKIs, and proposes interpretative guidelines for molecular stratification of NSCLC patients for TKI therapy.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16911776 PMCID: PMC1560164 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-1-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Guidelines for Microscope Analysis of NSCLC tissue sections hybridized with the SpectrumOrange LSI EGFR/SpectrumGreen CEP 7 FISH probe set (Vysis/Abbott Molecular) at UCCC.
| • Examine the parallel H&E stained section to locate areas rich in tumor cells. Recognize the tumor pattern, verify the cell density in the tumor areas and the size of the tumor nuclei. |
| • Identify 4–5 distinct tumor areas and define tissue landmarks for them. Perform this selection with the assistance of a lung pathologist. |
| • Use low power objective (20× or 40×) and DAPI filter to re-find the selected tumor areas in the FISH section based on the landmarks recognized in the H&E slide. Record the location of these areas. |
| • Move to a high power objective (100×), change to red, green, double red/green and/or triple blue/red/green band pass filters to inspect quality of the hybridization. |
| • The normal green signals (CEP 7) signals should be bright, compact (occasionally slightly stringy or diffuse) oval shapes. The red (EGFR) signals should be bright, small round shapes, commonly adjacent to a green CEP 7 signal. The green CEP7 green signal should be larger and brighter than the EGFR red signal. |
| • Background should appear dark and free of fluorescence particles or haziness. |
| • At least 75% of cells in the selected tumor areas should display hybridization signals not hampered by background noise for the specimen to qualify for analysis. |
| • Select approximately 10–20 representative nuclei for analysis in 2–3 microscope fields in each selected tumor area. Record the number of red and green signals for each individual nucleus in the FISH analysis worksheet. Select nuclei should have: |
| • Not less than median diameter compared with overall tumor nuclei to reduce the effect of the nuclear truncation. |
| • Unambiguous borders and objectively interpretable signals. |
| • At least one signal for each target. |
| • Scan the focus through the entire depth of the section to ensure that all signals are identified within each nucleus. |
| • Score a minimum of 50 representative nuclei per specimen (or 30 cells when gene amplification is present). |
| • Document results capturing images of representative fields (two if the specimen is homogeneous or more if the specimen is heterogeneous). |
UCCC criteria for stratification of NSCLC patients according to the EGFR FISH assay.
| • Specimens with EGFR gene amplification, defined as: |
| (a) EGFR gene to CEP 7 ratio ≥ 2 |
| (b) Small gene cluster (4–10 copies) or innumerable tight gene cluster in >10% the tumor cells independent of the EGFR to CEP 7 ratio |
| (c) Larger and brighter EGFR signals than CEP 7 signals in >10% the tumor cells while EGFR signals are smaller than the CEP 7 signals in the adjacent stromal and reactive cells independent of the EGFR to CEP 7 ratio |
| (d) >15 copies of the EGFR signals in >10% of tumor cells independent of the EGFR to CEP 7 ratio |
| • Specimens with ≥ 40% of cells displaying ≥ 4 copies of the EGFR signal |
| • Specimens without gene amplification as defined above and with <40% of cells displaying ≥ 4 copies of the EGFR signal |
Figure 1A and B. Examples of advanced non-small cell lung carcinomas showing high level of balanced aneusomy for the EGFR gene and the chromosome 7 centromere probes. C. EGFR gene amplification presented as extrachromosomal double minutes.
UCCC scoring and interpretation of different types of EGFR gene amplification in NSCLC specimens.
| Pattern Description | Scoring Criteria | Number of Cells to Score | Expected Ratio Gene to Chromosome | FISH result* |
| Large, loose clusters of red (EGFR) signals | Count signals thoroughly and calculate the FISH indexes | 30 | >2 | GA |
| Small, loose clusters of red (EGFR) signals | Count signals thoroughly and calculate the FISH indexes | 30 | >2 or ~1 if high level of aneusomy 7 is present | GA if ratio >2 GA if clusters are present in >10% cells, independent of ratio |
| Large, loose co-localized clusters of red (EGFR) and green (CEP 7) signals | Count signals thoroughly, account for the innumerable signals using the symbol greater than (>) in front of the final counting | 30 | ~1 | GA if clusters are present in >10% cells |
| Tightly packed, innumerable cluster of red (EGFR) signals or atypically large red (EGFR) signal, consistently bigger than the green (CEP 7) signal in the tumor cells but smaller in the adjacent stromal and reactive cells | Count signals in at least 50 cells and identify each cell displaying this specific feature in the analysis sheet | ≥ 50 | ~1 | GA if tight clusters or atypical red signal is present in >10% cells |
| EGFR as double minutes | Count signals thoroughly and calculate the FISH indexes | 30 | >2 | GA |
| Very high number of balanced red (EGFR) and green (CEP 7) signals | Count signals in at least 50 cells | ≥50 | ~1 | GA if >10% cells have ≥ 15 red (EGFR) signals |
* GA = EGFR gene amplification
Figure 2Distinct types of EGFR gene amplification identified in non-small cell lung carcinomas using the EGFR SpectrumOrange/CEP 7 SpectrumGreen FISH probe (Vysis/Abbott Molecular): A. Large EGFR gene clusters; B. Co-localized clusters of EGFR and CEP7 signals; C. Large and bright EGFR signal, larger than the CEP 7 signals in tumor cells; D. High frequency of balanced EGFR and CEP 7 signals.