Abstract

The purpose of this study was to define histological features determining the malignant potential of EGFR-mutated lung adenocarcinoma (LADC). Surgically resected tumors (EGFR-mutated LADCs with (21) and without (79) lymph node metastasis and EGFR wild-type LADCs with (26) and without (108) lymph node metastasis) and biopsy samples from inoperably advanced tumors (EGFR-mutated LADCs (78) and EGFR wild-type LADCs (99)) were examined. In surgically resected tumors, the EGFR-mutated LADCs with lymph node metastasis had the micropapillary element in a significantly greater proportion than others (Mann-Whitney tests P ≤0.026). The proportion of micropapillary element was higher in the EGFR-mutated LADC at the advanced stage (stage II, III, or IV) than in the tumor at the early stage (stage I) (Mann-Whitney test, P<0.0001). In the biopsy samples from inoperably advanced LADCs (177), EGFR-mutated tumors also had micropapillary element at a higher frequency than EGFR-wild type tumors (53/78 (68%), versus 30/99 (30%), Pearson x2 test, P<0.0001). In stage I EGFR-mutated LADCs (84), the tumors with the micropapillary element (34) exhibited a significantly higher recurrence rate than tumors without micropapillary element (50) (5-year Recurrence-free survival 64.4% versus 93.3%, log-rank test P = 0.028). The micropapillary element may be an exclusive determinant of malignant potential in EGFR-mutated LADC. It is suggested that EGFR-mutated LADC may develop through a distinct histogenesis, in which the micropapillary element is important for promoting progression.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death in the developed world, and lung adenocarcinoma (LADC) is the most common histological type of the disease

  • This study examined surgically resected tumors and biopsy samples from inoperably advanced tumors, and defined the histopathological features associated with malignant potential in EGFR-mutated LADCs

  • Histological element that associates with malignant potential in EGFRmutated LADCs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death in the developed world, and lung adenocarcinoma (LADC) is the most common histological type of the disease. Molecular oncology has revealed that oncogenic mutations are required to promote tumor expansion, namely driver mutations, in LADC. EGFR-mutated LADCs include highly malignant tumors that are inoperably advanced. It remains unclear whether resectable tumors progress to become inoperable tumors or whether inoperable tumors develop independently through an exclusive carcinogenetic pathway. This study examined surgically resected tumors and biopsy samples from inoperably advanced tumors, and defined the histopathological features associated with malignant potential in EGFR-mutated LADCs

II III IV
Results
Discussion
Surgical procedure
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call