Genomic staging of multifocal lung squamous cell carcinomas is independent of the comprehensive morphologic assessment Journal Article


Authors: Dacic, S.; Cao, X.; Bota-Rabassedas, N.; Sanchez-Espiridion, B.; Berezowska, S.; Han, Y.; Chung, J. H.; Beasley, M. B.; Dongmei, L.; Hwang, D.; Mino-Kenudson, M.; Minami, Y.; Papotti, M.; Rekhtman, N.; Roden, A. C.; Thunnissen, E.; Tsao, M. S.; Yatabe, Y.; Yoshida, A.; Wang, L.; Hartman, D. J.; Jerome, J. A.; Kadara, H.; Chou, T. Y.; Wistuba, I. I.; IASLC Pathology Committee
Article Title: Genomic staging of multifocal lung squamous cell carcinomas is independent of the comprehensive morphologic assessment
Abstract: Introduction: Morphologic and molecular data for staging of multifocal lung squamous cell carcinomas (LSCCs) are limited. In this study, whole exome sequencing (WES) was used as the gold standard to determine whether multifocal LSCC represented separate primary lung cancers (SPLCs) or intrapulmonary metastases (IPMs). Genomic profiles were compared with the comprehensive morphologic assessment. Methods: WES was performed on 20 tumor pairs of multifocal LSCC and matched normal lymph nodes using the Illumina NovaSeq6000 S4-Xp (Illumina, San Diego, CA). WES clonal and subclonal analysis data were compared with histologic assessment by 16 thoracic pathologists. In addition, the immune gene profiling of the study cases was characterized by the HTG EdgeSeq Precision Immuno-Oncology Panel. Results: By WES data, 11 cases were classified as SPLC and seven cases as IPM. Two cases were technically suboptimal. Analysis revealed marked genomic and immunogenic heterogeneity, but immune gene expression profiles highly correlated with mutation profiles. Tumors classified as IPM have a large number of shared mutations (ranging from 33.5% to 80.7%). The agreement between individual morphologic assessments for each case and WES was 58.3%. One case was unanimously interpreted morphologically as IPM and was in agreement with WES. In a further 17 cases, the number of pathologists whose morphologic interpretation was in agreement with WES ranged from two (one case) to 15 pathologists (one case) per case. Pathologists showed a fair interobserver agreement in the morphologic staging of multiple LSCCs, with an overall kappa of 0.232. Conclusions: Staging of multifocal LSCC based on morphologic assessment is unreliable. Comprehensive genomic analyses should be adopted for the staging of multifocal LSCC. © 2023 International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer
Keywords: staging; squamous; histologic subtyping; multifocal lung cancer; wes
Journal Title: Journal of Thoracic Oncology
Volume: 19
Issue: 2
ISSN: 1556-0864
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2024-02-01
Start Page: 273
End Page: 284
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtho.2023.09.275
PUBMED: 37717856
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11866686
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Natasha Rekhtman
    424 Rekhtman