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1. Grand RoundsMay 27, 2011Gene Expression Profiling in Cancer of Unknown Primary Paul Mehan MD
2. Disclosures I have nothing to disclose
3. Objectives Review the epidemiology, prognosis, and workup of Cancer of Unknown Primary (CUP)
Discuss Treatment options for CUP
Introduce Gene Expression Profiling and discuss its role in CUP
Review a pertinent case
4. Background
Cancer of Unknown Primary
Histologically proven malignancies
Generally poor prognosis
~40,000 cases annually
In majority of patients the primary is not identified with serial evaluations or even on autopsy
5. Pathology Subtypes
Well/Moderately Differentiated Adenocarcinoma (60%)
Poorly Differentiated Adenocarcinoma (30%)
Squamous Cell Carcinoma (5%)
Poorly Differentiated Malignant Neoplasm (5%)
6. Prognosis Favorable prognosis
Poorly Differentiated Carcinoma with Midline Distribution
Papillary Adenocarcinoma of Peritoneal Cavity (women)
Adenocarcinoma of Axillary Lymph Nodes (women)
SCC of cervical lymph nodes
Isolated Inguinal Adenopathy
Adenocarcinoma with Blastic bone mets (men)
Poorly Differentiated Neuroendocrine Carcinoma
Small Solitary Tumors
7. Prognosis Unfavorable Prognosis
Male Gender
Liver, Lung, or bone mets
Nonpapillary Malignant Ascites
Multiple Cerebral Metastases
8. Immunohistochemistry
9. PET Imaging Sve et al
Review of 10 studies evaluating the role of PET in the detection of unknown primary tumors
FDG PET detected primary tumors that were not apparent after conventional workup in 41% of patients
significantly changed clinical management in 34.7%
Detected previously unknown mets in 37% of patients
Kolesnikov-Gauthier et al
Prospective study using PET to detect primary tumor site in patients with unknown primary (24 patients)
Primary tumor confirmed (with f/u or surgery) in six patients (25%).
Primary tumor suggested but not confirmed in 5 patients.
10. Treatment Options Adenocarcinoma
Carbo/Taxol +/- Etoposide
Gem/Cis
Gem/Docetaxel
Squamous Cell
Cis/Taxane/5-FU
Neuroendocrine
Small Cell Therapy
Carcinoid Therapy
11. Gene Expression Profiling Genetic Profiling may represent a useful method to complement clinical, morphological, and IHC data
Gene Expression Tests
Microarrays
Thousands of target genes can be measured
RT-PCR
Smaller subsets of gene markers
12. Gene Expression Profiling Several Companies have created tests
Vary based upon:
Technology (RT PCR vs Microarray)
Number of Genes Tested
Number of Tumor Types Included
Ability to perform on FFPE vs FF samples
FDA approval
13. Gene Expression Profiling Pathwork Tissue of OriginTest
RNA is extracted from a sample of tumor tissue
Target prepared from RNA is labeled with a fluorescent marker
Labeled target is spread over the surface of the chip
Target binds to complementary gene-specific probes
Relative fluorescence intensity of each gene-specific probe is then measured
Measures the expression pattern of >2,000 genes
Compares it to expression patterns of a panel of 15 known tissue types
14. Gene Expression Profiling
15.
16. Gene Expression Profiling Validation Study
595 FFPE metastatic lesions or poorly/undifferentiated primary tumors (with reference diagnosis) were studied
563 (~95%) yielded 30ng RNA and were processed
549/563 (~98%) were processed successfully
462/549 (~84%) passed prespecified microarray quality control criteria and were used in analysis
Agreement with Reference Diagnosis
Positive percent agreement was 88.5%
Negative percent agreement was 99.1%
17. Gene Expression Profiling Validation Study
Similarity Scores
Range 0?100
A measure of the similarity of the RNA expression pattern of the specimen to the RNA expression pattern of the indicated tissue (15 tissues total)
Similarity score <5 was 99.8% accurate in ruling out tissue of origin (on average 12/15 tumors SS <5)
18.
19. Gene Expression Profiling Varadhachary et al.
Purpose
Evaluate feasibility of 10 gene RT-PCR to identify the tissue of origin in patients with CUP
Methods
120 pts with CUP with FFPE specimens
Results
Assay successful in 87%
61% assigned tissue of origin
Majority of clinical scenerios consistent with reported TOO
Patients with colon cancer profiles had better response to colon cancer specific therapies than standard CUP regimens
20. Gene Expression Profiling Horlings et al
Purpose
Evaluate gene expression profiling for routine clinical practice in patients with adenocarcinoma of unknown primary
Patients and Methods
84 patients with known primary, 38 patients with ACUP
16/38 ACUP classified with extensive IHC
FFPE samples analyzed with 1900 feature CupPrint microarray
Results
83% of tumors of known origin classified correctly
15/16 ACUP samples confirmed IHC
14/22 ACUP (unconfirmed by IHC) made a valuable contribution to site of origin
21. Gene Expression Profiling Greco et al
Background
Accurate identification of CUP patients with colorectal tissue of origin and subsequent treatment with CRC regimens would be expected to improve outcomes over treatment of similar patients with empiric CUP regimens
Methods
213 CUP tumor specimens were tested with mRNA-based RT-PCR molecular assays (Veridex Assay or bioTheranostics CancerTYPE ID assay)
Results
32 specimens had CRC genetic signatures
29 were treated with first or second line CRC regimens with objective response rates of 69% and 54%, respectively
The median, 2 year, and 4 year survival were 22months, 43%, and 38% respectively.
Conclusions
When treated with site-specific therapy, the CUP patients with CRC genetic signatures had similar median survival to patients with known advanced CRC and superior survival to CUP patients receiving empiric therapy.
22. Gene Expression Profiling
23. Clinical Case 53yo male who p/w neck lymphadenopathy and hip pain.
PET CT with diffuse LAD involving cervical, supraclavicular, mediastinal, retroperitoneal, and internal/external iliac chains
PET CT also noted FDG Avid gastric wall thickening
Abdominal MR obtained with no new findings
EGD with gastric biopsies unrevealing
L Supraclavicular lymph node chosen for biopsy
24. Clinical Case
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30. Clinical Case
31. Clinical Case Afinitor was started for presumed papillary kidney carcinoma.
On first f/u visit he noted marked improvement in cervical lymphadenopathy and improving functional status.
32. Conclusion Questions???