scholarly journals A New Metastatic Lymph Node Classification-based Survival Predicting Model in Patients With Small Bowel Adenocarcinoma: A Derivation and Validation Study

EBioMedicine ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 134-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shan Wu ◽  
Jin-Nan Chen ◽  
Qing-Wei Zhang ◽  
Chao-Tao Tang ◽  
Xin-Tian Zhang ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A253-A253
Author(s):  
Chris Hansis ◽  
Xiaomei Wang ◽  
Tao Wang ◽  
Gerald Feldman

BackgroundImmunotherapies against programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) have been established as an effective treatment for a subset of lung cancer patients. Even though it is critical for a successful therapy to know prevalent PD-L1 expression patterns in all affected tissues, information on matching lymph node metastases and immune cells is particularly limited. The purpose of this study was thus to evaluate comparative PD-L1 expression profiles in those tissues.MethodsFDA-approved IHC assays for PD-L1 (Dako 22C3) were performed on a lung tissue array (LC814A, US Biomax) according to manufacturer’s instructions. Histopathological analysis by H-scoring was performed to determine the rate and intensity of positive tumor and immune cell staining for each of the 80 cores. The H score was calculated as follows: A total of up to 300 cells were assessed, per specimen, at 40x high-power magnification (typically over 7–10 fields). A staining level of 0–3 was then assigned to each cell, to designate the intensity of specific positive membranous-to-cytoplasmic staining. The H score was subsequently calculated as% cells staining at level 1 (x1) +% cells staining at level 2 (x2) +% cells staining at level 3 (x3) = total H score per sample. This resulted in a maximum possible H score of 300.ResultsOf the 16 adenocarcinoma tumor samples with a valid staining, 7 (44%) showed positive PD-L1 staining for tumor cells and 10 (63%) for primary immune cells. Importantly, 9 matching metastatic lymph node samples out of the 16 samples (56%) showed an increased PD-L1 H score compared to primary tumors for both tumor cells and immune cells (figure 1). Of the 15 squamous cell carcinoma samples with a valid staining, 11 (73%) showed detectable PD-L1 expression levels in the primary tumor and 12 (80%) in the primary immune cells, while 7 (47%) and 9 (60%) showed lower scores in matching metastatic lymph node tumor cells and their immune cells, respectively (figure 2). Very low or no expression of PD-L1 was detected in small cell lung cancer, as to be expected from previous studies.Abstract 236 Figure 1PD-L1 Staining in adenocarcinomaAbstract 236 Figure 2PD-L1 Staining in squamous cell carcinomaConclusionsSquamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas display significant heterogeneity with regard to PD-L1 expression in associated lymph node metastases. While the reasons for this frequent discordant PD-L1 expression pattern involving both tumor and immune cells need to be investigated further, our findings may help guide the proper interpretation of PD-L1 companion diagnostic test results and subsequent therapeutic decisions.AcknowledgementsThe views in this Abstract have not been formally disseminated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and should not be construed to represent any agency determination or policy.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dídac R. Arbonès ◽  
Henrik G. Jensen ◽  
Annika Loft ◽  
Per Munck af Rosenschöld ◽  
Anders Elias Hansen ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel M Baumgartner ◽  
Sudeep Banerjee ◽  
Jason K Sicklick

Adenocarcinoma is the second most common nonduodenal small bowel tumor. Small bowel adenocarcinoma has risk factors similar to those of colorectal adenocarcinoma but is rarer and less well understood. Diagnosis relies on advanced imaging techniques as well as endoscopy or enteroscopy for tissue diagnosis. Aggressive biology and vague symptoms in early disease cause a majority of patients to present with late-stage disease. Adenocarcinomas with lymph node involvement should be treated with resection and systemic chemotherapy. In contrast, systemic chemotherapy alone should be employed in cases with distant metastases unless the primary tumor is bleeding, perforated, or causing a bowel obstruction.   This review contains 4 figures, 5 tables and 17 references Key words: adenocarcinoma, chemotherapy, enteroscopy, hereditary syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, lymph node, mesentery, small bowel  


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel M Baumgartner ◽  
Sudeep Banerjee ◽  
Jason K Sicklick

Adenocarcinoma is the second most common nonduodenal small bowel tumor. Small bowel adenocarcinoma has risk factors similar to those of colorectal adenocarcinoma but is rarer and less well understood. Diagnosis relies on advanced imaging techniques as well as endoscopy or enteroscopy for tissue diagnosis. Aggressive biology and vague symptoms in early disease cause a majority of patients to present with late-stage disease. Adenocarcinomas with lymph node involvement should be treated with resection and systemic chemotherapy. In contrast, systemic chemotherapy alone should be employed in cases with distant metastases unless the primary tumor is bleeding, perforated, or causing a bowel obstruction.   This review contains 4 figures, 5 tables and 17 references Key words: adenocarcinoma, chemotherapy, enteroscopy, hereditary syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, lymph node, mesentery, small bowel  


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document