Abstract
Although lung cancer remains the most common cause of global cancer-related mortality, the identification of oncogenic driver alterations and the development of targeted drugs has dramatically altered the therapeutic landscape. In this retrospective study, we found that 97.7% samples carried at least one mutation in the 25 genes tested in our cohort. 53.6% samples were positive for EGFR mutations, followed by TP53 (41.1%), KRAS (11.8%), ERBB2 (4.3%). EGFR mutations were mainly found in female adenocarcinomas, while TP53 was mainly found in male non-adenocarcinomas. Significant differences can be found in the mutation rate of EGFR (60.9% vs 11.9%), KRAS (12.2% vs 25.0%), STK11 (1.5% vs 11.9%), FGFR3 (2.4% vs 0.0%) and ERBB4 (1.2% vs 6.1%) between adenocarcinoma in our cohort and TCGA-LUAD data (all p < 0.001). What's more, we found that the mutation of EGFR increased significantly from adenocarcinomas in situ (AIS, 21.4%) to microinvasive adenocarcinomas (MIA, 52.4%) and invasive adenocarcinomas (IA, 61.1%), while the mutation of ERBB2 dropped markedly from AIS (21.4%) to MIA (9.5%) and IA (4.1%). At last, comparations between targeted NGS and ARMS-based single gene test in the detection of EGFR showed a 94.6% consistence. In conclusion, targeted NGS can provide a comprehensive mutational profile of lung cancer. Considering the high mutation rate of EGFR in NSCLC of Asian populations, a specialized detection strategy should be conducted.
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