| Literature DB >> 29212495 |
Sakurako Uozu1,2, Kazuyoshi Imaizumi3, Teppei Yamaguchi1, Yasuhiro Goto1, Kenji Kawada4, Tomoyuki Minezawa1, Takuya Okamura1, Ken Akao1, Masamichi Hayashi1, Sumito Isogai1, Mitsushi Okazawa5, Naozumi Hashimoto2, Yoshinori Hasegawa2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: When epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene mutation-positive non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) acquires resistance to the initial tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment, reassessing the tumor DNA by re-biopsy is essential for further treatment selection. However, the process of TKI-sensitive tumor re-progression and whether re-biopsy is possible in all cases of acquired resistance to EGFR-TKI remain unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Bronchoscopy; CT guided needle biopsy; EGFR-TKI; Metastasis; Molecular targeted therapy; Re-biopsy; Retrospective analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29212495 PMCID: PMC5719748 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-017-0514-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Criteria to evaluate the feasibility of biopsy for the progressive lesions
| Feasibility of biopsy | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Category A | Lung nodules of long diameter ≥ 2 cm and positive CT bronchus signa for TBB |
| Intrapulmonary lesions of long diameter ≥ 1 cm and ≤5 cm distant from the thoracic wall for CTNB | |
| Hilar or mediastinal lymph node (#2, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12) enlargement with a long diameter ≥ 1 cm for EBUS-TBNA (EUS-FNA) | |
| Pleural effusion with a mean thickness ≥ 1 cm on chest CT image for thoracentesis | |
| Peripheral lymph node or cutaneous lesions of long diameter ≥ 2 cm for needle biopsy | |
| Category B | Lung nodules of long diameter 1 ≤ and <2 cm with positive CT bronchus sign for TBB |
| Intrapulmonary lesions of long diameter < 1 cm and ≤5 cm distant from the thoracic wall, or lesions of long diameter ≥ 1 cm and >5 cm distant from the thoracic wall for CTNB | |
| Pleural effusion with mean thickness < 1 cm on chest CT image for thoracentesis | |
| Intra-abdominal lesions (including hepatic or adrenal metastases) of long diameter ≥ 2 cm for CTNB | |
| Category C | Lung nodules of long diameter < 1 cm or negative CT bronchus for TBB |
aCT bronchus sign defined according to the relationship between the target lesion and nearest bronchus [9]
TBB transbronchial biopsy, TBLB transbronchial lung biopsy, CTNB CT-guided needle biopsy, EBUS-TBNA endobronchial ultrasound guided transbronchial needle aspiration, EUS-FNA endoscopic ultrasound fine needle aspiration, US ultrasound
Fig. 1Representative cases for the assessment of re-biopsy feasibility
Progressive or relapsing sites were evaluated for the feasibility of re-biopsy according to the criteria shown in Table 1. a Lung nodule (long diameter ≥ 2 cm) with a responsive bronchus leading to the center of the lesion (category A for trans-bronchial biopsy [TBB]). b Lung nodule adjacent to the nearest bronchus (category A for TBB). c Lung nodule not reaching a responsive bronchus but accessible by CT-guided needle biopsy (CTNB) (long diameter < 1 cm and ≤5 cm distant from the thoracic wall category B for CTNB). d Diffuse pulmonary infiltration presenting a lymphangitic distribution (category A for trans-bronchial lung biopsy [TBLB]). e Small pulmonary metastases (not feasible or extremely difficult for TBB or CTNB; category C). f Brain metastases (surgical resection required; category C). g Solitary pleural metastasis (long diameter ≤ 1 cm; category B for CTNB). h Para-aortic lymph node metastasis, front and adjacent to the abdominal aorta (CTNB is highly unsafe; category C). i Bone metastasis with extra-osseous invasion (category A for CTNB)
Patient characteristics
| Total number of patients | 69 |
| Age (years) | |
| Median (range) | 66 (40–88) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 26 (38%) |
| Female | 43 (62%) |
| ECOG performance status (at the start of EGFR-TKIa) | |
| 0 | 34 (49%) |
| 1 | 17 (25%) |
| 2 | 17 (25%) |
| ≥ 3 | 1 (1%) |
| Pathologic diagnosis | |
| Adenocarcinoma | 68 (99%) |
| Pleomorphic carcinoma | 1 (1%) |
| Stagea (at initial diagnosis) | |
| I | 4 (6%) |
| II | 4 (6%) |
| III | 9 (13%) |
| IV | 52 (75%) |
| EGFR mutation | |
| Exon 19 deletion | 33 (48%) |
| Exon 21 L858R | 31 (45%) |
| Other | 5 (7%) |
| EGFR-TKI treatment | |
| Gefitinib | 57 (83%) |
| Erlotinib | 12 (17%) |
| Line of EGFR-TKI therapy | |
| First line | 37 (53%) |
| Second line | 19 (29%) |
| Third line or greater | 13 (18%) |
aStaging procedures were carried out using the 7th edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Cancer Staging Manual
Fig. 2Distribution of dominant (most accessible) relapse sites and feasibility of re-biopsy of each lesion at RECIST-PD and clinical-PD In the 69 patients analyzed, the most common estimated re-biopsy target site at RECIST-PD was the re-grown primary tumor (lung), the second most common was intra-pulmonary metastasis, and the third was brain metastasis. At clinical-PD, the most frequent lesion was pleural effusion followed by primary lung lesions, intra-pulmonary metastases and brain metastases. The feasibility of re-biopsy was evaluated according to the criteria presented in Table 1
Fig. 3a Total proportion of re-biopsy feasibility at RECIST-PD and clinical-PD Re-biopsy feasibility may increase with disease progression. At RECIST-PD, 55, 13, and 32% of lesions were category A, B, and C, respectively. At clinical-PD, 74, 10, and 16% were category A, B, and C, respectively. b Comparison of re-biopsy feasibility at primary and metastatic lesions Re-biopsy for primary lesions was evaluated as category A in all cases, both at RECIST-PD and clinical-PD. However, the feasibility of re-biopsy of relapsed lesions in metastatic disease varies among patients and re-biopsy becomes less complex as progressive or relapsed lesions develop in the clinical course. Re-biopsy may be highly invasive or complex (category C) in some patients with metastatic relapse, even at clinical-PD