| Literature DB >> 25699082 |
Abstract
Background. Currently, few rebiopsies are performed in relapses of advanced non-small cell lung cancer. They are not customary in clinical practice of lung cancer. However, it is not possible to properly target treatments in cases of relapse without knowing the nature of new lesions. Design. This paper comprehensively summarizes the available literature about rebiopsy and broadly discusses the importance of rebiopsy in advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Results. Altogether 560 abstracts were used as material for further analysis. 19 articles were about clinical rebiopsy in lung cancer and were reviewed in detailed manner. Conclusions. This review shows that rebiopsy is feasible in non-small cell lung cancer, and success rates can be high if rebiopsy is accompanied by adequate evaluation before biopsy. Its use may resolve the difficulties in sampling bias and detecting changes in cancer characteristics. In cases where treatment was selected based on tissue characteristics that then change, the treatment selection process must be repeated while considering new characteristics of the tumor. Rebiopsy may be used to predict therapeutic resistance and consequently redirect targeted therapies. Such knowledge may resolve the difficulties in sampling bias and also in selecting preexisting clones or formulating drug-resistant ones. Rebiopsy should be performed more often in non-small cell lung cancer.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25699082 PMCID: PMC4325200 DOI: 10.1155/2015/809835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Techniques for obtaining tissue.
| Method | Nature of sample | Size | Suitable for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sputum | Cytology | 50 mg | Limited immunohistology |
| Bronchoscopy brushing | Cytology | 50 mg | Limited immunohistology |
| Fine needle biopsy | Cytology | 100 mg | Immunohistology and PCR |
| Core needle biopsy | Histology | 200–400 mg | Plus gene mutation testing, FISH, and DNA tests |
| Resection | Histology | >1 g | Plus exome tests, large immunohistology panels, and RNA tests (−70°C) |
Information from rebiopsy.
| Standard of care | Experimental |
|---|---|
| Histologic | Proteomics |
| Immunohistochemistry | RNAsequencing |
| Molecular information | Exome analysis |
| EGFR/KRAS/ALK | |
PubMed literature search for rebiopsy.
| Rebiopsy | 309 |
| + Colon cancer | 2 |
| + Lung cancer | 16 |
| + Breast cancer | 23 |
| + Prostate cancer | 104 |
| Rebiopsy histology | 235 |
| Rebiopsy DNA | 12 |
| Rebiopsy mutations | 11 |
Rebiopsy and lung cancer.
| Number of articles | Number of patients | Content | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case reports | 4 | 8 | [ | |
| Pharmacoeconomic analysis | 1 | [ | ||
| Original articles | 9 | |||
| 53 | TS expression | [ | ||
| 65 | Beta tubulin | [ | ||
| 70 | T790 mutation | [ | ||
| 78 | T790 mutation | [ | ||
| 93 | T790 mutation | [ | ||
| 94 | EGFR mutations | [ | ||
| 121 | T790 mutation | [ | ||
| 155 | Mutation genotyping | [ | ||
| 331 | ECCI and RRMI proteins | [ |
Why rebiopsy is not done in NSCLC.
| (i) Not part of clinical routine | |
| (ii) Anatomical location is difficult for biopsy | |
| (iii) Sense of risk involved in rebiopsy | |
| (iv) Limited number of drugs that can be directed by rebiopsy | |
| (v) Only a few reports available in the literature |
Figure 1Role of rebiopsy in NSCLC treatment selection. Rebiopsy will renew tumor characteristics and give opportunity to act on changes of tumor behavior. Rebiopsy can confirm old existing targets when current therapies are allowed, or it can find new targets that need to be treated with new drug molecules in clinical trials. Thus changes in treatment facilitate better tumor control.
Recommendation for rebiopsy in NSCLC.
|
| |
| (i) Too difficult a location for safe biopsy | |
| (ii) Result will not change treatment | |
|
| |
| (i) If the prior specimen is too small for adequate tumor characterization, including genetic testing for predictive alterations | |
| (ii) If relapse happens a long time (six months) after CR treatment result | |
| (iii) If the new tumor behaves in a different way than expected from the primary tumor | |
| (iv) If new molecules entering clinical trials in the near future is foreseeable, such as adenocancer relapses |