| Literature DB >> 27184093 |
J Scott Ferguson1, Ryan Van Wert2, Yoonha Choi3, Michael J Rosenbluth3, Kate Porta Smith3, Jing Huang3, Avrum Spira4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bronchoscopy is frequently used for the evaluation of suspicious pulmonary lesions found on computed tomography, but its sensitivity for detecting lung cancer is limited. Recently, a bronchial genomic classifier was validated to improve the sensitivity of bronchoscopy for lung cancer detection, demonstrating a high sensitivity and negative predictive value among patients at intermediate risk (10-60 %) for lung cancer with an inconclusive bronchoscopy. Our objective for this study was to determine if a negative genomic classifier result that down-classifies a patient from intermediate risk to low risk (<10 %) for lung cancer would reduce the rate that physicians recommend more invasive testing among patients with an inconclusive bronchoscopy.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Bronchoscopy; Clinical utility; Decision making; Gene expression; Lung cancer; Solitary pulmonary nodule
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27184093 PMCID: PMC4869188 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-016-0217-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Demographics of study participants
| Demographic characteristics of study participants ( | |
|---|---|
| Specialty ( | |
| Pulmonology | 147 (73 %) |
| Pulmonary critical care | 108 (53 %) |
| Interventional pulmonology | 27 (13 %) |
| Years in practice (median, IQR) | 14 (12) |
| Practice affiliation ( | |
| Private group practice | 92 (46 %) |
| University/Academically affiliated practice | 44 (22 %) |
| Practice owned by community hospital or health system | 42 (21 %) |
| Independent practice | 20 (10 %) |
| Government affiliated practice | 4 (2 %) |
| Geography ( | |
| West | 60 (30 %) |
| Northeast | 55 (27 %) |
| South | 50 (25 %) |
| Midwest | 37 (18 %) |
| Bronchoscopies for suspect lung cancer (monthly) (median, IQR) | 10 (12) |
Demographics of patient cases
| Variable | ( |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Male | 24 (67 %) |
| Female | 12 (33 %) |
| Age, median (IQR) | 60.5 (23.2) |
| Race | |
| Caucasian | 32 (89 %) |
| African American | 3 (8 %) |
| Other | 1 (3 %) |
| Smoking Status | |
| Former | 22 (61 %) |
| Current | 14 (39 %) |
| Pack-years, median (IQR) | 39.0 (33.7) |
| Lesion size | |
| < 2 cm | 19 (53 %) |
| 2 to 3 cm | 5 (14 %) |
| ≥ 3 cm | 7 (19 %) |
| Ill-defined infiltrate | 5 (14 %) |
| Lesion location | |
| Peripheral | 18 (50 %) |
| Central | 7 (19 %) |
| Both | 10 (28 %) |
| Unknown | 1 (3 %) |
| Lung cancer histology | 12 (33 %) |
| Non-small cell | 11 (92 %) |
| Adenocarcinoma | 8 (73 %) |
| Squamous | 2 (18 %) |
| NSCLC other | 1 (9 %) |
| Small cell | 1 (8 %) |
| Benign diagnoses | 24 (67 %) |
| Infection | 8 (33 %) |
| Resolution or stability | 7 (29 %) |
| Sarcoidosis | 1 (4 %) |
| Other | 8 (33 %) |
Patients and case evaluations by cancer status and bronchial genomic classifier results
| Patients | Total case evaluations ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Not shown classifier results | Shown classifier results | ||
| Total | 36 | 787 | 736 |
| Benign | 24 (67 %) | 528 (67 %) | 491 (67 %) |
| “Low risk” result | 12 (50 %) | 252 (48 %) | 238 (48 %) |
| “Intermediate risk” result | 12 (50 %) | 276 (52 %) | 253 (52 %) |
| Malignant | 12 (33 %) | 259 (33 %) | 245 (33 %) |
| “Low risk” result | 1 (8 %) | 16 (6 %) | 13 (5 %) |
| “Intermediate risk” result | 11 (92 %) | 243 (94 %) | 232 (95 %) |
Fig. 1Impact of low risk (negative) bronchial genomic classifier results on decision to take patients to an additional procedure after an inconclusive bronchoscopy. When physicians were presented cases with low risk classifier results (n = 251), 18 % of the time they recommended a procedure, a three-fold reduction from when physicians were presented blinded cases associated with low risk classifier results (57 % invasive procedure rate, n = 268, p < 0.001)
Fig. 2Impact of intermediate risk (positive) bronchial genomic classifier results on decision to take patients to an additional procedure after an inconclusive bronchoscopy. When physicians were presented cases with intermediate risk classifier results (n = 485), 65 % of the time they recommended a procedure, a 15 percentage point increase from when physicians were presented blinded cases associated with intermediate risk classifier results (50 % invasive procedure rate, n = 519, p < 0.001)
Fig. 3Rate of procedures by physicians for all benign or malignant patients when not shown vs. shown bronchial genomic classifier results. a There was an overall reduction in physician decision to take benign patients to procedures when presented with classifier results (54 to 41 %, p < 0.001). b In malignant patients, there was an overall increase in physician decision to take to a procedure when presented with classifier results (50 to 64 %, p = 0.003)