EGFR MUTATIONS IN NON-SMALL CELL LUNG CANCER: LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGY AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE.
REVISTA MEDICO-CHIRURGICALA A SOCIETATII DE MEDICI SI NATURALISTI DIN IASI 2015;
119:1031-1036. [PMID:
26793845]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 06/05/2023]
Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Lung cancer's dismal prognosis led to new therapeutic approaches among which TKIs being among most promising;
MATERIAL AND METHOD
Retrospective study at the Regional Institute of Oncology Iasi of non small cell lung cancer patients which underwent molecular investigations between November 2013 - September 2014. EGFR mutation status (positive, negative, undetermined) was assessed with an Entrogen EGFR kit using DNA extracted from paraffin embedded samples (surgical or endobronchial biopsies) with the Macherey-Nagel "NucleoSpin FFPE DNAkit" and then amplified on a Applied Biosystem 7500 Real Time PCR System.
RESULTS
There were 63 adenocarcinoma samples (17 females, mean age 60,9 +/- 9 years): 49 primary lung tumors and 14 secondary lesions (brain, lymph nodes, pleural). There was insufficient bioptic material for three cases. TTF1 status was determined for 46 patients--six were negative. There were twelve mutations identified (7 female subjects, 5 male)--six L858R, five Del 19 and one G719X; ten were TTF1 positive for the remaining two TTF1 status was unknown. Female sex predominance was statistically significant (p = 0.02, chi squared). Mean age for mutation positive patients was 64 +/- 10 years; there were three never smokers, three active smokers and no data on smoking status was available for six subjects.
CONCLUSION
Although small dimension of the study group precludes statistical significance EGFR mutations seem to correlate with TTF1 status.
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