Clarifying the spectrum of driver oncogene mutations in biomarker-verified squamous carcinoma of lung: Lack of EGFR/KRAS and presence of PIK3CA/AKT1 mutations Journal Article


Authors: Rekhtman, N.; Paik, P. K.; Arcila, M. E.; Tafe, L. J.; Oxnard, G. R.; Moreira, A. L.; Travis, W. D.; Zakowski, M. F.; Kris, M. G.; Ladanyi, M.
Article Title: Clarifying the spectrum of driver oncogene mutations in biomarker-verified squamous carcinoma of lung: Lack of EGFR/KRAS and presence of PIK3CA/AKT1 mutations
Abstract: Purpose: There is persistent controversy as to whether EGFR and KRAS mutations occur in pulmonary squamous cell carcinoma (SQCC). We hypothesized that the reported variability may reflect difficulties in the pathologic distinction of true SQCC from adenosquamous carcinoma (AD-SQC) and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma due to incomplete sampling or morphologic overlap. The recent development of a robust immunohistochemical approach for distinguishing squamous versus glandular differentiation provides an opportunity to reassess EGFR/KRAS and other targetable kinase mutation frequencies in a pathologically homogeneous series of SQCC. Experimental Design: Ninety-five resected SQCCs, verified by immunohistochemistry as DNp63 +/TTF-1 -, were tested for activating mutations in EGFR, KRAS, BRAF, PIK3CA, NRAS, AKT1, ERBB2/HER2, and MAP2K1/MEK1. In addition, all tissue samples from rare patients with the diagnosis of EGFR/KRAS-mutant "SQCC" encountered during 5 years of routine clinical genotyping were reassessed pathologically. Results: The screen of 95 biomarker-verified SQCCs revealed no EGFR/KRAS [0%; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0%-3.8%], four PIK3CA (4%; 95% CI, 1%-10%), and one AKT1 (1%; 95% CI, 0%-5.7%) mutations. Detailed morphologic and immunohistochemical reevaluation of EGFR/KRAS-mutant "SQCC"identified during clinical genotyping (n = 16) resulted in reclassification of 10 (63%) cases as AD-SQC and five (31%) cases as poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma morphologically mimicking SQCC (i.e., adenocarcinoma with "squamoid" morphology). One (6%) case had no follow-up. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that EGFR/KRAS mutations do not occur in pure pulmonary SQCC, and occasional detection of these mutations in samples diagnosed as "SQCC" is due to challenges with the diagnosis of AD-SQC and adenocarcinoma, which can be largely resolved by comprehensive pathologic assessment incorporating immunohistochemical biomarkers. ©2012 AACR.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; human tissue; aged; gene mutation; major clinical study; genetic analysis; biological marker; gene; differential diagnosis; tumor differentiation; genetic variability; genotype; adenosquamous carcinoma; mutation rate; lung squamous cell carcinoma; pik3ca gene; akt1 gene; braf gene; kras gene; nras gene; egrf gene; erbb2 gene; her2 gene; map2k1 gene; mek1 gene
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 18
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2012-02-15
Start Page: 1167
End Page: 1176
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-11-2109
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22228640
PMCID: PMC3487403
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 1" - "Export Date: 2 April 2012" - "CODEN: CCREF" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Natasha Rekhtman
    423 Rekhtman
  2. Andre L Moreira
    176 Moreira
  3. Laura Justine Tafe
    18 Tafe
  4. Marc Ladanyi
    1318 Ladanyi
  5. William D Travis
    738 Travis
  6. Maureen F Zakowski
    289 Zakowski
  7. Geoffrey R Oxnard
    24 Oxnard
  8. Paul K Paik
    249 Paik
  9. Maria Eugenia Arcila
    653 Arcila
  10. Mark Kris
    867 Kris