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. 2009 Dec;33(12):1752-64.
doi: 10.1097/PAS.0b013e3181b8cf03.

Comprehensive histologic assessment helps to differentiate multiple lung primary nonsmall cell carcinomas from metastases

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Comprehensive histologic assessment helps to differentiate multiple lung primary nonsmall cell carcinomas from metastases

Nicolas Girard et al. Am J Surg Pathol. 2009 Dec.

Abstract

The pathologic classification of nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is evolving. Lung adenocarcinoma is morphologically heterogeneous, with mixtures of acinar, papillary, bronchioloalveolar, and solid patterns in more than 80% of cases. In case of synchronous or metachronous multiple NSCLC, the distinction of intrapulmonary metastases from independent primary tumors is of great clinical importance as it influences staging and potentially the therapeutic strategy. Here we took advantage of a cohort of 20 patients with 42 multiple NSCLC tumors (24 potential pair comparisons) that were annotated molecularly using genomic and mutational profiling to evaluate the value of comprehensive histologic assessment in this setting. Using the Martini-Melamed criteria, paired tumors were characterized as multiple primary NSCLCs in 21 cases and as intrapulmonary metastases in 3 cases. Genomic and mutational data led to a diagnosis of multiple primaries in 14 cases and of metastases in 8 cases; 2 cases could not be assessed. This molecular characterization contradicted the Martini-Melamed diagnosis in 7 (32%) of the 22 assessable comparisons. Adenocarcinoma was found in 32 (76%) of the 42 tumors. After review in a blinded fashion, semiquantitative comprehensive histologic assessment of paired tumors was different in 16 and similar in 8 paired tumors. We found that comparing adenocarcinomas is a complex issue that requires assessment not only of percentages of the histologic subtypes, but also the recording of additional histologic details such as cytologic features, patterns of stroma, necrosis, discrete nodularity versus miliary growth and variants such as clear cell, signet ring, mucinous, and fetal patterns. We also found that paired squamous cell carcinomas could be compared based on histologic subtyping in addition to cytologic and stromal characteristics. Considering histologically different tumors as multiple primaries, and similar tumors as metastases, comprehensive histologic subtyping was consistent with the molecular characterization in 20 (91%) of the 22 pairs comparisons. In summary, based on a well characterized cohort with detailed clinical, pathologic and molecular data, we found comprehensive histologic assessment is a powerful tool that seems to be a promising way to determine whether multiple lung adenocarcinomas or squamous cell carcinomas are metastatic or multiple primaries. This has great clinical implications for staging and therapeutic management of lung cancer patients with multiple tumors. Given its high correlation with molecular characterization of such tumors, it may provide a much cheaper and faster method to address this problem.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Comprehensive histologic assessment methodology for multiple non-small cell lung cancer.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Two different adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 1 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). The following histologic subtypes of adenocarcinoma are identified in tumor A (panel A1, x40): 60% papillary (panel A2, x200) and 40% bronchioloalveolar (panel A3, x200). The following histologic subtypes are identified in tumor B (panel B1, x40): 80% papillary (panel B2, x200), 10% acinar, and 10% bronchioloalveolar. In addition there is prominent lymphoid stroma. These different morphological features suggest these tumors are multiple primary lung cancer.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Two different adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 12 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). The following morphological subtypes are identified in tumor A (panel A1, x40): 70% papillary (panel A2, x200) and 30% acinar with clear cell features (panel A3, x200). The following morphological subtypes are identified in tumor B (panel B1, x40): 60% acinar (panel B2, x200) and 40% papillary with abundant extracellular mucin. These different morphological features suggest these tumors are multiple primary lung cancer.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Two similar adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 7 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). The following morphological subtypes are identified in tumor A (panel A1, x40): 80% papillary (panel A2, x200), 10% acinar, and 10% papillary (panel A3, x200). Tumor B (panel B1, H&E staining, x40) is exclusively made of papillary areas (panel B2, x200). These similar morphological features suggest these tumors correspond to metastatic lung cancer.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Results of the comprehensive histologic assessment of paraffin-embedded samples
Figure 6
Figure 6
Two similar adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 13 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). A “miliary-like” architecture is present in tumor A with small papillary clusters of tumor cell scattered through the lung parenchyma (panel A, x40) and tumor B (panel B, x40). These similar morphological features suggest tumor B is a metastasis from tumor A.
Figure 7
Figure 7
Three similar adenocarcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 20 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). Nests of clear tumor cells surrounded by fibrovascular stroma were identified in tumor A (panel A, x40), tumor B (panel B, x40), and tumor C (panel C, x40). These similar morphological features suggest tumor B and C are metastasis from tumor A.
Figure 8
Figure 8
Two different squamous cell carcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 10 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). Stroma exhibits desmoplastic features in tumor A (panel A, x40) and inflammatory features in tumor B (panel B, x40). These different morphological features suggest these tumors correspond to multiple primary lung cancer.
Figure 9
Figure 9
Two similar squamous cell carcinomas. Comprehensive histologic review of case 19 (paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed tissues, hematoxylin and eosin staining). The sarcomatoid and basaloid variants are identified in tumor A (panel A1, x200 and panel A2, x40) and tumor B (panel B1, x200 and panel B2, x40). These similar morphological features suggest tumor B is a metastasis from tumor A.
Figure 10
Figure 10
Survival analysis. Time to progression of multiple primary and metastatic non-small cell lung tumors, as classified using the Martini-Melamed criteria (A), molecular consensus (B), and comprehensive histologic assessment (C). Time to progression was calculated from the resection of the last tumor. Squamous cell carcinoma was the most common histologic type in the Martini-Melamed study, and adenocarcinoma was most common in the current study.

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