Abstract

Accurate identification of tissue of origin (ToO) for patients with carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) may help customize therapy to the putative primary and thereby improve the clinical outcome. We prospectively studied the performance of a microRNA-based assay to identify the ToO in CUP patients. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) metastatic tissue from 104 patients was reviewed and 87 of these contained sufficient tumor for testing. The assay quantitates 48 microRNAs and assigns one of 25 tumor diagnoses by using a biologically motivated binary decision tree and a K-nearest neighbors (KNN). The assay predictions were compared with clinicopathologic features and, where suitable, to therapeutic response. Seventy-four of the 87 cases were processed successfully. The assay result was consistent or compatible with the clinicopathologic features in 84% of cases processed successfully (71% of all samples attempted). In 65 patients, pathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC) suggested a diagnosis or (more often) a differential diagnosis. Out of those, the assay was consistent or compatible with the clinicopathologic presentation in 55 (85%) cases. Of the 9 patients with noncontributory IHC, the assay provided a ToO prediction that was compatible with the clinical presentation in 7 cases. In this prospective study, the microRNA diagnosis was compatible with the clinicopathologic picture in the majority of cases. Comparative effectiveness research trials evaluating the added benefit of molecular profiling in appropriate CUP subsets are warranted. MicroRNA profiling may be particularly helpful in patients in whom the IHC profile of the metastasis is nondiagnostic or leaves a large differential diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) patients poses a therapeutic challenge

  • Of the 9 patients with noncontributory IHC, the assay provided a tissue of origin (ToO) prediction that was compatible with the clinical presentation in 7 cases

  • In this prospective study, the microRNA diagnosis was compatible with the clinicopathologic picture in the majority of cases

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Summary

Introduction

Carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) patients poses a therapeutic challenge. With the growing number of cytotoxic and targeted therapies shown to be effective against specific cancers [3,4,5,6,7], inno-. Vative methods to identify the tissue of origin (ToO) of CUP cancers may permit the use of more targeted therapies for CUP patients [8, 9]. There is increasing evidence that CUP cancers, rather than being a distinct entity biologically and molecularly different from other cancers, are a group of unrelated site-specific tumors which happen to share the property of having a diminutive primary that escapes detection [10]. Accurate identification of the putative tumor of origin may be helpful in optimizing patient management

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