| Literature DB >> 31999917 |
Dohun Kim1,2, You-Soub Lee3,2, Duk-Hwan Kim4, Suk-Chul Bae3.
Abstract
The first step in treating lung cancer is to establish the stage of the disease, which in turn determines the treatment options and prognosis of the patient. Many factors are involved in lung cancer staging, but all involve anatomical information. However, new approaches, mainly those based on the molecular biology of cancer, have recently changed the paradigm for lung cancer treatment and have not yet been incorporated into staging. In a group of patients of the same stage who receive the same treatment, some may experience unexpected recurrence or metastasis, largely because current staging methods do not reflect the findings of molecular biological studies. In this review, we provide a brief summary of the latest research on lung cancer staging and the molecular events associated with carcinogenesis. We hope that this paper will serve as a bridge between clinicians and basic researchers and aid in our understanding of lung cancer.Entities:
Keywords: adenocarcinoma; epigenetic alteration; lung cancer; mutation; staging
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31999917 PMCID: PMC6999714 DOI: 10.14348/molcells.2020.2246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cells ISSN: 1016-8478 Impact factor: 5.034
Essentials of T, N, and M descriptors for the lung cancer and individual staging
| T descriptors (primary tumor) | |
| Tis | Carcinoma |
| T1 | T1a(mi) – Minimally invasive adenocarcinoma |
| T2 | Invasion of visceral pleura |
| T3 | Separate nodule in the same lobe (primary tumor) |
| T4 | Separate nodule in a same side (primary tumor) but a different lobe |
| N descriptors (regional lymph node involvement) | |
| N0 | No lymph node metastasis |
| N1 | Metastasis in ipsilateral peribronchial, hilar, or intrapulmonary lymph node(s) |
| N2 | Metastasis in ipsilateral mediastinal or subcarinal lymph node(s) |
| N3 | Metastasis in scalene, supraclavicular, or contralateral mediastinal, hilar lymph node(s) |
| M descriptors (distant metastasis) | |
| M0 | No distant metastasis |
| M1a | Separate tumor nodule(s) contralateral lobe or pleural/pericardial nodule or malignant pleural/pericardial effusion |
| M1b | Single extrathoracic metastasis |
| M1c | Multiple extrathoracic metastasis in one or more organs |
| Individual staging | |
| Stage 0 | TisN0M0 |
| Stage I | T1, T2a with N0M0 |
| Stage II | T2b, T3 with N0M0 |
| Stage III | T4N0M0 |
| Stage IV | Any T, Any N, M1 |
Fig. 1Atlas of lung cancer staging
T factor is determined by size, location, invasion, and number of primary tumors. Location of metastatic lymph nodes defines the N factor. The M factor refers to metastasis: malignant pleural or pericardial metastasis is M1a, single extrathoracic metastasis is M1b, and multiple extrathoracic metastasis is M1c. These images and content are from the chapter 6 in the book of Rami-Porta (2016). Permission for use of this material was granted by IASLC.
Important factors not addressed in the current staging method
| Title | Factors | Clinical implications |
|---|---|---|
| Histopathologic information | ||
| Grade | Poorly differentiated | Worse prognostic factor for NSCLC (< 20 mm) |
| Mitosis | Mitosis count (> 10/10 HPF) | Worse prognostic factor for stage I NSCLC |
| Mutations of prognosis | ||
| | V600E | High incidence of axillary lymph node metastasis |
| | Mutations in exon 18, 19, or 21 | Better prognostic factor for survival |
| | Mutations in exon 2 | Worse prognostic factor for survival |
| | Better prognostic factor for survival | |
| | Gene copy number variations (> 5 copies/cell) | Worse prognostic factors, especially in squamous cell or stage III/IV NSCLC |
| Epigenetic alterations | ||
| | Inactivation | Worse prognostic factor |
| | Methylation | More developed in stage II–IV |
| | Methylation | Shorter duration of survival |
Fig. 2Step-wise progression of LUAD
Radiologically, LUAD develops from GGO (ground-glass opacity) to mixed and non-GGO. Pathologically AIS lesions progresses to MIA when invasion occurs. If the invasion exceeds 5 mm, then the MIA will progress to the next step. White arrow indicates pure GGO, and red arrow indicates the solid portion of a GGO nodule, yellow arrow indicates a non-GGO lung nodule.
Stepwise progression of LUAD and associated molecular events
| Authors | Population | AAH (%) | AIS (%) | MIA (%) | LUAD (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-malignant to minimally invasive | ||||||
|
| AAH (n = 20) | 35 | 35 | 49 | ||
| AIS (n = 43) | ||||||
| MIA (n = 47) | ||||||
|
| AAH (n = 25) | 8 | 20 | 75 | ||
| AIS (n = 20 zones) | 12 | 20 | 0 | |||
| MIA (n = 15 zones) | 8 | 7 | 35 | |||
|
| AIS (n = 15) | 67 | 68 | |||
| MIA (n = 40) | 13 | 8 | ||||
| LUAD (n = 17) | 13 | 53 | ||||
|
| AIS (n = 11) | 17 | 17 | |||
| MIA (n = 25) | 2 | 10 | ||||
| LUAD (n = 6) | 0 | 21 | ||||
| LUAD | ||||||
|
| Stage I (n = 106) | 55 | ||||
|
| Stage I (n = 127) | 51 | ||||
| 11 | ||||||
|
| Stage I (n = 569) | 63 | ||||
| 42 | ||||||
Fig. 3Molecular events associated with the stepwise progression of LUAD
In a series of processes from precancerous lesions to AIS, MIA, and invasive adenocarcinoma, epigenetic alterations such as RUNX3 inactivation occur first (oncogenic initiation), and then driver mutations in genes such as EGFR and K-RAS are activated (oncogenic activation). Finally, the development of TP53 mutation causes invasion and metastasis (oncogenic progression).