| Literature DB >> 32676351 |
Abstract
Airspace invasion in lung cancer has been known over the last 30 years, but it was only recently that WHO 2015 formally recognized it as a mechanism of invasion with the terminology of tumor spread through air spaces (STAS). Multiple studies have shown the association of STAS with lower survival and suggest that STAS is an independent prognostic factor across lung adenocarcinoma of all stages and in other histologic subtypes of lung cancer as well. Consequently, STAS is designated as an exclusion criterion of adenocarcinoma in situ and minimally invasive adenocarcinoma; thus, the presence of STAS impacts the diagnosis and staging of lung adenocarcinoma. Further, wedge resection and segmentectomy have been increasingly applied for small node negative tumors and the presence of STAS in those specimens may indicate the requirement of completion lobectomy. Given these significant clinical implications, we, pathologists, need to recognize and appropriately report STAS (possibly including at the time of intraoperative consultation). However, emerging data suggests that more work should be done to improve consensus and identification of STAS, including at frozen section. In this review, the evolution of our understanding of airspace invasion over the past decade, the clinical significance of STAS, and controversies and practical issues associated with the diagnosis of STAS are discussed. 2020 Translational Lung Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Lung cancer; airspace invasion; frozen section; spread through air spaces (STAS); sublobar resection
Year: 2020 PMID: 32676351 PMCID: PMC7354155 DOI: 10.21037/tlcr.2020.01.06
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Lung Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-6751
Figure 1Histology of tumor spread through air spaces (STAS). STAS is classified into micropapillary, solid nest and single cell patterns. More than one pattern of STAS is often seen in one case, and micropapillary STAS is most common in lung adenocarcinoma. The micropapillary pattern (A,B) is characterized by small free-floating clusters of tumor cells with no fibrovascular core beyond the border of the tumor (dotted line in A). The solid nest pattern (C) shows large nests of tumor cells that are free-floating in alveolar spaces, in a pattern reminiscent of tumor islands. The single cell pattern (D) shows scattered highly atypical single cells (arrowheads) admixed with intra-alveolar macrophages with low-grade cytology. Of note, ring-like structures (arrows in D) are classified into the micropapillary pattern. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification: (A) ×20; (B) ×200; (C&D) ×400.
Selected studies on lung adenocarcinoma vs. STAS (or its equivalent)
| First author | Year of publication | Number of subjects and histology | Tumor stage | Prevalence | RFS# | OS# |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kadota ( | 2015 | 411 ADC | I (≤2 cm) | 38% | Increased CIR | N/A |
| Warth ( | 2015 | 569 ADC | I–IV | Limited STAS: 21.6%, extensive STAS: 29.0% | Decreased irrespective of etent, but not significant by MVA | Decreased irrespective of extent, but not significant by MVA |
| Morimoto ( | 2016 | 444 ADC | I–IV | 46.3% of tumors w/mPAP pattern | Decreased: HR 2.13 in tumors with mPAP pattern | N/A |
| Shiono ( | 2016 | 318 ADC | I | 14.8% | Decreased: HR 2.24 | Decreased: HR 2.40 |
| Uruga ( | 2017 | 208 ADC | I (≤2 cm) | Low: 18.3%, high: 29.3% | Decreased: HR 7.35 for high vs. no, decreased: HR 4.45 for high | Not significant by MVA |
| Dai ( | 2017 | 383 ADC | IA | 30.3% | Decreased: HR 2.36 for tumors 2–3 cm | Decreased: HR 3.94 for tumors 2–3 cm |
| Masai ( | 2017 | 508 NSCLC treated w/sublobar resection | IA | 15.0% | Decreased: HR 11.24 for local recurrence | N/A |
| Yi ( | 2018 | 368 ADC | 0–IB | N/A | Decreased: HR 3.20 | N/A |
| Toyokawa ( | 2018 | 276 ADC | I | Low: 17.4%, high: 38.0% | Decreased: HR: 3.27 for any STAS vs. no STAS | Decreased: HR: 5.67 for any STAS vs. no STAS |
| Shiono ( | 2018 | 514 NSCLC | IA | 20.2% | Decreased: HR 3.11 for sublobar resection only | Decreased: HR 3.17 for sublobar resection only |
| Lee ( | 2018 | 316 ADC | I–III | 50.6% | Decreased | Not significant by MVA |
| Yang ( | 2018 | 242 ADC w/radical lobectomy | IA–IB | 33.5% | Decreased: HR 2.80 for tumors | Decreased: HR 4.50 for tumors 2–4 cm |
| Qiu ( | 2019 | 208 ADC w/lobectomy | I–IIIA | 51.4% | Decreased: HR 1.76 | Decreased: HR 3.39 |
| Shiono ( | 2019 | 848 NSCLC including 638 ADC | I | 16.4% | Decreased: HR 1.48 | N/A |
| Ren ( | 2019 | 752 ADC | I | 29.9% | Decreased: HR 3.53 for sublobar resection | Decreased: HR 4.55 for sublobar resection |
| Kadota ( | 2019 | 735 ADC | I–IV | 34.0% | Decreased: HR 5.33 for all, decreased: HR 6.87 for stage I | Decreased: HR 2.32 for all, decreased: HR 2.85 for stage I |
STAS, tumor spread through air spaces; ADC, adenocarcinoma; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; mPAP, micropapillary; N/A, not available; RFS, recurrence free survival; CIR, cumulative incidence of recurrence; HR, hazard ratio; OS, overall survival; MVA, multivariate analysis. *Free tumor clusters; **Aerogenous spread with floating cancer cell clusters (ASFC)/STAS; ***Aerogenous spread; #Results are based on MVA.
Figure 2Tumor spread through air spaces (STAS) in other histologic subtypes. An example of STAS seen in squamous cell carcinoma (A,B) and that in carcinoid tumor (C,D) are shown. The periphery of the carcinoid tumor is outlined in black (C). Of note, the solid nest pattern of STAS is typically seen in squamous cell carcinoma and neuroendocrine tumors. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification: (A) ×40; (B) ×200; (C) ×20; (D) ×200.
Figure 3Re-implantation of STAS with stromal response. An example of micropapillary adenocarcinoma with abundant STAS is shown. (A,B) The main mass exhibits predominant micropapillary pattern. (C) In the section away from the main tumor, there are scattered STAS with micropapillary pattern or small solid nests in the background of emphysematous changes with alveolar wall thickening. (D) A higher magnification of the boxed area in C reveals a focus with micropapillary pattern or small nests of tumor cells in close proximity to and focally attached to the alveolar wall (arrows) associated with organizing fibrosis suggestive of stromal reaction to re-implantation of STAS. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification: (A) ×20; (B); ×200; (C) ×20; (D) ×200.
Figure 4Histology of mechanical artifacts. (A) An example of non-keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma demonstrating large tumor nests away from the tumor border. (B) A high-power magnification of A reveals jagged edges of the nest consistent with a mechanical artifact. (C) Adenocarcinoma with predominant lepidic and focal acinar patterns in the background of emphysema. There are multiple small clusters of epithelial cells away from the tumor border (dotted circle). (D) A higher magnification of the boxed area in C reveals strips of benign respiratory epithelial cells admixed with alveolar macrophages. Some epithelial cells exhibit reactive changes that may be confused with tumor cells, in particular, at the time of intraoperative consultation. The linear configuration and association with blue ink are useful features for differentiating artifacts from STAS. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification: (A) ×20; (B); ×200; (C) ×40; (D) ×400.
Various definitions of STAS applied in selected studies
| First author | Publication year | Terminology used | Number of clusters/cells | Distance from the main tumor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kadota ( | 2015 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Warth ( | 2015 | STAS | Small solid cell nests (at least 5 tumor cells) | Limited: ≤3 alveolae away, |
| Jin ( | 2015 | Aerogenous spread | N/A | At least one 40× field away |
| Morimoto ( | 2016 | Free tumor clusters | More than 3 clusters containing <20 nonintegrated micropapillary tumor cells | >3 mm apart from the main tumor |
| Shiono ( | 2016 | Aerogenous spread with floating cancer cell clusters (ASFC)/STAS | N/A | At least 0.5 mm from the main tumor |
| Uruga ( | 2017 | STAS | Low: 1–4 single cells or clusters, high: ≥5 single cells or clusters | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Dai ( | 2017 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Masai ( | 2017 | STAS | N/A | At least one alveolus away from the main tumor |
| Yi ( | 2018 | Aerogenous spread | N/A | At least one 40× field away |
| Toyokawa ( | 2018 | STAS | Low: 1–4 single cells or clusters, high: ≥5 single cells or clusters | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Shiono ( | 2018 | STAS | More than a few clusters | At least 0.5 mm from the main tumor |
| Lee ( | 2018 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Yang ( | 2018 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Shiono ( | 2019 | STAS | More than a few clusters | At least 0.5 mm from the main tumor |
| Ren ( | 2019 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
| Kadota ( | 2019 | STAS | N/A | Beyond the edge of the main tumor |
STAS, tumor spread through air spaces; N/A, not available.
Figure 5Abundant artifacts in frozen section and frozen permanent section slides. (A) A frozen permanent slide of adenocarcinoma with predominant lepidic and papillary patterns exhibiting multiple free-floating clusters in the airspaces away from the tumor border. (B) A higher magnification of the boxed area of A at the edge of the section shows a few strips of tumor cells consistent with an artifact. (C) A higher magnification of the dotted box area of A reveals micropapillary cluster of or single tumor cells (arrowheads) admixed with strips of tumor cells and alveolar macrophages. (D) Additionally, rare isolated tumor cells with micropapillary pattern (arrowheads) are identified in the separate area away from the tumor border. The presence of abundant artifacts, in particular in the setting of frozen section, may hamper an optimal assessment for STAS and interobserver agreement. Hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification: (A) ×20; (B); ×200; (C) ×400; (D) ×400.