Literature DB >> 30034242

Mutational analysis on gastric, duodenal, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases and blood from a case of primary lung adenocarcinoma.

Xin Yang1, Rui Chen1, Chen Wu1, Weiqing Zhao1, Mei Ji1.   

Abstract

Rapid metastasis contributes significantly to the high mortality rates in lung adenocarcinoma. The present study reports a rare case of primary lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastric, duodenal, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases. A large gene panel based on the next-generation sequencing was used to detect gene mutations in different metastatic sites and blood. The results showed that the gene mutation spectrums among different metastatic foci were roughly similar. The mutation abundance was highest in mediastinal lymph nodes. Unique mutation sites were detected only in mediastinal lymph nodes, bone, and gastric metastatic foci. Despite partial heterogeneity, there are currently no applicable targeted drugs to adopt. In addition, tumor mutation burden (TMB) showed that blood, gastric, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases were all TMB-High, while the duodenal metastasis was TMB-Low. This study is the first to report a rare case of newly diagnosed lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastrointestinal metastases and to perform mutation analyses on all metastatic foci. Large sample sizes with similar cases are required to gain deeper insights.

Entities:  

Keywords:  TMB; duodenal metastasis; gastric metastasis; lung adenocarcinoma

Year:  2018        PMID: 30034242      PMCID: PMC6049053          DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S167602

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Onco Targets Ther        ISSN: 1178-6930            Impact factor:   4.147


Introduction

In 2016, Cancer Statistics reported that lung cancer continues to be a malignant tumor with high morbidity and mortality.1 Most patients have already developed distant metastases when they first seek treatment. The common metastatic locations are the brain, liver, adrenal glands, and bones. Gastrointestinal metastasis of lung adenocarcinoma is rare. Recent large-sample retrospective clinical studies have shown that its clinical incidence is approximately 0.26%–0.33%.2,3 Lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastric and duodenal metastases at initial diagnosis is extremely rare, and so far we have found no relative case reports in the literature. Many recent studies have discovered inconsistent gene mutations between the primary tumor and metastases within the same individual.4–6 However, mutational analysis among different metastatic foci in the same individual is rare. This paper reports the case of newly diagnosed primary lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastric, duodenal, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases. A gene panel based on the next-generation sequencing (NGS) was used to detect gene mutations among different metastatic foci and blood.

Case presentation

A 59-year-old male patient was referred to our hospital with a 1 week history of right upper limb pain and stomach discomfort. The patient had a 60-pack-year smoking history with no family history of cancer. He worked in an industrial wastewater treatment plant for many years. Related examinations were performed upon admission, which showed abnormally increased tumor indicators (CEA: 75.95 ng/mL; CYFRA21-1: 11.62 ng/mL; CA72-4: 17.89 U/mL; CA-125: 45.39 U/mL; and CA-153: 62.97 U/mL). Chest computed tomography revealed a lobulated soft tissue mass measuring 2.7×2.3 cm in the posterior segment of the upper left lung lobe, and an irregular hollow shadow existed in the foci (Figure 1A). Mediastinal and perihilar lymph node metastases were noted (Figure 1B). Furthermore, the right upper humeral bone metastasis combined with a pathological bone fracture was observed (Figure 2A), which was confirmed by 99mTc bone scan. Brain magnetic resonance imaging result was negative. Because of the restricted location of pulmonary lesions and the presence of pulmonary bullae in the surrounding tissues, computed tomography-guided transthoracic needle lung biopsy or electron tracheoscope-guided transbronchial lung biopsy was considered too risky to perform. Therefore, the metastasis from the upper right humeral segment was biopsied. The pathological results showed poorly differentiated metastatic carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry showed that the tumor was AE1/AE3 (+), TTF-1 (+), CK7 (+), Napsin A (±), CK5/6 (±), P40 (−), CAIX (+), and CD10 (−), which met the criteria for poorly differentiated metastatic carcinoma which tended to be pulmonary in origin. Gastroscopy revealed an ulcer of approximately 2×2 cm located in posterior wall of gastric corpus, and it was covered with white mucus and surrounded by congestion and edema (Figure 2B). In addition, a rough uplift of 1.5×2.0 cm was observed at the junction of the duodenal bulb and the descending part, leaving the bulbar lumen deformed and narrow (Figure 2C). Next, an endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspirate was performed on the mediastinal lymph nodes (Figure 2D). These pathological diagnoses of biopsy tissues were all metastatic poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated TTF-1 (+), CK7 (+), Napsin A (+), CK20 (−), CA19-9 (−), and Ki67 (approximately 50% +), which supported the assumption of lung adenocarcinoma that had metastasized to stomach, duodenum, and mediastinal lymph nodes.
Figure 1

(A) Chest computed tomography revealed a lobulated soft tissue (2.7×2.3 cm, arrow) with an irregular hollow shadow in the posterior segment of the upper left lung lobe. (B) Mediastinal and perihilar lymph node metastases were noted (arrow).

Figure 2

(A) Three-dimensional reconstruction of computed tomography image revealed that the right upper humeral bone metastasis was combined with a pathological bone fracture (arrow). (B) Gastroscopy revealed an ulcer (arrow) of approximately 2×2 cm located in posterior wall of gastric corpus. (C) A rough uplift (arrow) of 1.5×2.0 cm was observed in the junction of duodenal bulb and descending part. (D) Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspirate was performed on mediastinal lymph nodes (arrow).

A large gene panel based on the NGS was used to detect gene mutations among the four tissue and blood samples. The NGS genetic testing panel (OncoScreen Plus™, Burning Rock Company, Guangzhou, China)7 involves a modified Roche/Nimblegen SeqCap EZ (Roche, Madison, WI, USA) covering 520 genes that are closely associated with cancer pathogenesis and targeted therapy, including whole exon regions of 312 genes and hotspot mutation regions (exons, introns, and promoter regions) of 208 genes. The large panel can comprehensively and accurately detect variations involving gene mutations, amplifications, and fusions with clear clinical relevance to tumors. Unfortunately, the results showed no detected mutations in core genes associated with solid tumors (AKT1, ALK, BRAF, BRCA1, BRCA2, EGFR, ERBB2, ESR1, HRAS, KIT, KRAS, MET, NRAS, PDGFRA, PTEN, RET, and ROS1). All the detected mutation genes and their abundance, the tumor mutation burden (TMB), and microsatellite stability types are shown in Figure 3A. Among all metastatic foci, the mutation abundance in the mediastinal lymph nodes (p,0.001), stomach (p=0.001), and bone (p=0.018) were significantly higher than that in blood, as shown in Figure 3B. (Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Comparisons of the quantitative data were performed using one-way analysis of variance. The p-value of <0.05 based on the 2-sided test is considered statistically significant.) Unique mutation sites were only detected in mediastinal lymph nodes (EPHA3 p.E647K, ABL2 p.L1048V, RANBP2 p.D1926H, FBXW7 p.Ser678, and NEGR1 p.N107D), stomach (NTRK1 p.S439F, KMT2C p.D1234Y, JUN p.E238K, JUN p.G139R, MLH1 p.E430D, RAD50 p.Q199K, RPTOR p.R348G, RBM10 p.G567S, PBRM1 c.237-1G>A, PRKDC p.D3830Y, and HNF1A p.Trp165), and bone (TAF1 p.Lys667fs) metastases. Genetic testing showed that the gene mutation spectrums of the 4 tissue samples were roughly similar, which might indirectly confirm that all tissue samples were lung adenocarcinoma metastatic foci.
Figure 3

(A) Mutational analysis on gastric, duodenal, bone, mediastinal lymph node metastases, and blood. Different colors represent unique mutation sites in each location. (B) The mutation abundance on all metastatic foci and blood. The p-value of <0.05 based on the 2-sided test is considered to be statistically significant.

Note: * nonsense mutation.

Additionally, TMB values for blood, mediastinal lymph nodes, bone, and gastric metastatic foci were significantly higher than that of the duodenal metastatic focus. Therefore, blood, mediastinal lymph nodes, bone, and gastric metastatic foci were evaluated as TMB-High, and the duodenal metastatic focus was evaluated as TMB-Low (TMB ≥20 was defined as TMB-High, 10< TMB <20 as TMB-Medium, and TMB ≤10 as TMB-Low). According to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network clinical practice guidelines for non-small-cell lung cancer (2017, Version 4), the patient would receive 6 cycles of pemetrexed (500 mg/m2) and carboplatin (AUC 6.0 mg/mL min) administered at 21 day intervals as first-line therapy. Although TMB was high in 4 metastatic foci, PD-L1 expression was negative in all tissues. Thus, anti-PD-1 immunotherapy would be applied after first-line therapy.

Discussion

Tumor metastasis is the process by which cancer cells disperse from a primary site and progressively colonize distant organs. Certain heterogeneity exists between primary tumor and metastases, and gene mutation probabilities in metastases are significantly higher than that in the primary tumor.8 The metastatic process of tumor cells is affected by both the internal immune microenvironment in different metastatic sites and the external intervention of different chemotherapies, molecular targeted therapies, or immune therapy regimens, which altogether result in the heterogeneity of metachronous metastatic foci.9 Currently, few studies have focused on the heterogeneity among different metastatic foci in the same individual, especially those in rare metastatic sites. This study, for the first time, reported a rare case of lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastric and duodenal metastases. In addition, NGS was performed to detect 520 tumor-associated gene mutations in all metastatic foci and blood. Unfortunately, the mutation analyses in this case suggested that the patient could not benefit from any currently available targeted drugs. However, we found that the mutation spectrums between the metastatic foci and blood were roughly similar. The main reasons for this were as follows: 1) this patient worked in an industrial wastewater treatment plant for many years. Industrial pollution was considered as an important cause of disease, and the patient was also a heavy smoker. Based on relevant studies, these factors might have caused the low percentage of EGFR mutations and high TMB levels.10,11 2) The patient already had multiple metastases upon initial diagnosis and had previously received no medical interventions. So, tumor cells mainly followed a natural metastatic pattern. Furthermore, we found that the mutation abundance was highest in mediastinal lymph nodes was highest among all metastases. In such cases, where the primary foci cannot be biopsied, mediastinal lymph node biopsy might be preferentially considered. Although the mutation abundance of liquid biopsy was significantly lower than that of tumor tissue biopsies, its TMB level was equivalent to that of tumor biopsies. The liquid biopsy technology based on NGS might be an appropriate alternative for TMB analysis in this case. However, the greatest disadvantage of liquid biopsy technology is its relatively low sensitivity.12 Clinical studies have indicated that higher TMB may yield better response rate to PD-1 inhibition treatment.13 The TMB results obtained from the NGS large panel or WES were highly correlated, confirming that selective sequencing of limited regions could sufficiently provide a full understanding of mutational burdens for predicting the potential anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapeutic efficacy.14 Evaluating the blood, mediastinal lymph nodes, bone, and gastric metastases in this patient indicated that the patient was TMB-High, yet the duodenal metastatic focus presented as TMB-Low. The inconsistency is difficult to explain but may be associated with the absolute level and different metastatic routes of tumor cells. In summary, gastrointestinal metastasis in newly diagnosed lung adenocarcinoma is rare in clinical practice. Mutation analyses on all metastatic foci and blood performed in the present case helped us realize that the gene mutation analyses can yield comprehensive information for targeted therapy guidance and can have certain reference value for clinically diagnosing metastatic foci. More in-depth studies need to be performed in large sample sizes of patients with similar rare disease.

Informed consent

Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this manuscript and any accompanying images.
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