| Literature DB >> 31509456 |
Richard S P Huang1, Derek Smith1, Catherine H Le1, Wen-Wei Liu1, Ellen Ordinario1, Chitra Manohar1, Michael Lee1, Jaya Rajamani1, Huan Truong1, Jing Li1, Cindy Choi1, Jingchuan Li1, Amrita Pati1, Lukas Bubendorf1, Reinhard Buettner1, Keith M Kerr1, Fernando Lopez-Rios1, Antonio Marchetti1, Ivonne Marondel1, Andrew G Nicholson1, Ayşim Büge Öz1, Patrick Pauwels1, Frederique Penault-Llorca1, Giulio Rossi1, Erik Thunnissen1, Amy Hanlon Newell1, Greg Pate1, Ina Menzl1.
Abstract
CONTEXT.—: The ability to determine ROS1 status has become mandatory for patients with lung adenocarcinoma, as many global authorities have approved crizotinib for patients with ROS1-positive lung adenocarcinoma. OBJECTIVE.—: To present analytical correlation of the VENTANA ROS1 (SP384) Rabbit Monoclonal Primary Antibody (ROS1 [SP384] antibody) with ROS1 fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). DESIGN.—: The immunohistochemistry (IHC) and FISH analytical comparison was assessed by using 122 non-small cell lung cancer samples that had both FISH (46 positive and 76 negative cases) and IHC staining results available. In addition, reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) as well as DNA and RNA next-generation sequencing (NGS) were used to further examine the ROS1 status in cases that were discrepant between FISH and IHC, based on staining in the cytoplasm of 2+ or above in more than 30% of total tumor cells considered as IHC positive. Here, we define the consensus status as the most frequent result across the 5 different methods (IHC, FISH, RT-PCR, RNA NGS, and DNA NGS) we used to determine ROS1 status in these cases. RESULTS.—: Of the IHC scoring methods examined, staining in the cytoplasm of 2+ or above in more than 30% of total tumor cells considered as IHC positive had the highest correlation with a FISH-positive status, reaching a positive percentage agreement of 97.8% and negative percentage agreement of 89.5%. A positive percentage agreement (100%) and negative percentage agreement (92.0%) was reached by comparing ROS1 (SP384) using a cutoff for staining in the cytoplasm of 2+ or above in more than 30% of total tumor cells to the consensus status. CONCLUSIONS.—: Herein, we present a standardized staining protocol for ROS1 (SP384) and data that support the high correlation between ROS1 status and ROS1 (SP384) antibody.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31509456 DOI: 10.5858/arpa.2019-0085-OA
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Pathol Lab Med ISSN: 0003-9985 Impact factor: 5.534