BACKGROUND: Major guidelines do not recommend routine molecular profiling of lung squamous-cell carcinoma (LUSC) because the prevalence of actionable alterations is thought to be low. Increased utilization of next-generation sequencing (NGS), particularly with cell-free circulating tumor DNA, facilitates reevaluation of this premise. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively evaluated the prevalence of actionable alterations in 2 distinct LUSC cohorts totaling 492 patients. A total of 410 consecutive patients with stage 3B or 4 LUSC were tested with a targeted cell-free circulating DNA NGS assay, and 82 patients with LUSC of any stage were tested with a tissue NGS cancer panel. RESULTS: In the overall cohort, 467 patients (94.9%) had a diagnosis of LUSC, and 25 patients (5.1%) had mixed histology with a squamous component. A total of 10.5% of the LUSC subgroup had somatic alterations with therapeutic relevance, including in EGFR (2.8%), ALK/ROS1 (1.3%), BRAF (1.5%), and MET amplification or exon 14 skipping (5.1%). Sixteen percent of patients with mixed histology had an actionable alteration. In the LUSC subgroup, 3 evaluable patients were treated with targeted therapy for an actionable alteration; all of them experienced partial response. CONCLUSION: In this large, real-world LUSC cohort, we observed a clinically significant prevalence of actionable alterations. Accurate local histopathologic assessment in advanced-stage LUSC can be challenging. Further evaluation of the genomic landscape in this setting is warranted to potentially identify underappreciated treatment options.
BACKGROUND: Major guidelines do not recommend routine molecular profiling of lung squamous-cell carcinoma (LUSC) because the prevalence of actionable alterations is thought to be low. Increased utilization of next-generation sequencing (NGS), particularly with cell-free circulating tumor DNA, facilitates reevaluation of this premise. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively evaluated the prevalence of actionable alterations in 2 distinct LUSC cohorts totaling 492 patients. A total of 410 consecutive patients with stage 3B or 4 LUSC were tested with a targeted cell-free circulating DNA NGS assay, and 82 patients with LUSC of any stage were tested with a tissue NGS cancer panel. RESULTS: In the overall cohort, 467 patients (94.9%) had a diagnosis of LUSC, and 25 patients (5.1%) had mixed histology with a squamous component. A total of 10.5% of the LUSC subgroup had somatic alterations with therapeutic relevance, including in EGFR (2.8%), ALK/ROS1 (1.3%), BRAF (1.5%), and MET amplification or exon 14 skipping (5.1%). Sixteen percent of patients with mixed histology had an actionable alteration. In the LUSC subgroup, 3 evaluable patients were treated with targeted therapy for an actionable alteration; all of them experienced partial response. CONCLUSION: In this large, real-world LUSC cohort, we observed a clinically significant prevalence of actionable alterations. Accurate local histopathologic assessment in advanced-stage LUSC can be challenging. Further evaluation of the genomic landscape in this setting is warranted to potentially identify underappreciated treatment options.
Authors: Anna Michelotti; Marco de Scordilli; Elisa Bertoli; Elisa De Carlo; Alessandro Del Conte; Alessandra Bearz Journal: Int J Mol Sci Date: 2022-06-17 Impact factor: 6.208
Authors: Stepan M Esagian; Georgia Ι Grigoriadou; Ilias P Nikas; Vasileios Boikou; Peter M Sadow; Jae-Kyung Won; Konstantinos P Economopoulos Journal: J Cancer Res Clin Oncol Date: 2020-05-27 Impact factor: 4.553
Authors: Whitney E Lewis; Lingzhi Hong; Frank E Mott; George Simon; Carol C Wu; Waree Rinsurongkawong; J Jack Lee; Vincent K Lam; John V Heymach; Jianjun Zhang; Xiuning Le Journal: JTO Clin Res Rep Date: 2021-10-09
Authors: Parneet K Cheema; Shantanu O Banerji; Normand Blais; Quincy S-C Chu; Patrice Desmeules; Rosalyn A Juergens; Natasha B Leighl; Brandon S Sheffield; Paul F Wheatley-Price; Barbara L Melosky Journal: Curr Oncol Date: 2021-11-09 Impact factor: 3.677
Authors: Ming Tang; Hussein A Abbas; Marcelo V Negrao; Maheshwari Ramineni; Xin Hu; Shawna Marie Hubert; Junya Fujimoto; Alexandre Reuben; Susan Varghese; Jianhua Zhang; Jun Li; Chi-Wan Chow; Xizeng Mao; Xingzhi Song; Won-Chul Lee; Jia Wu; Latasha Little; Curtis Gumbs; Carmen Behrens; Cesar Moran; Annikka Weissferdt; J Jack Lee; Boris Sepesi; Stephen Swisher; Chao Cheng; Jonathan Kurie; Don Gibbons; John V Heymach; Ignacio I Wistuba; P Andrew Futreal; Neda Kalhor; Jianjun Zhang Journal: Nat Commun Date: 2021-12-06 Impact factor: 14.919