1 Thoracic Oncology Unit, Department of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Torino; 2 Mario Negri Institute, Milano and Departments of 3 Pathology and 4 Thoracic Surgery, Azienda Ospedaliera San Luigi, Orbassano, Torino, Italy
Received 26 February 2003; revised 20 May 2003; accepted 13 August 2003
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ABSTRACT |
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We designed a prospective study to test epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in resected stage IIIIA non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and to correlate overexpression with survival.
Patients and methods:
EGFR expression was evaluated in 130 consecutive NSCLC patients after radical surgery (60 squamous cell carcinomas, 48 adenocarcinomas, 22 large cell carcinomas: stage I, 41 (31%); stage II, 37 (29%) and stage IIIA, 52 (40%).
Results:
Overall, 101 of 130 (78%) specimens expressed EGFR, and with a cut-off value of 10% positive cells 48 cases (37%) were classified as positive. At univariate analysis, EGFR was significantly more expressed in stage III (50%) than stage I (20%) and stage II (25%) (P <0.03). No correlation with histotype was found. After a median follow-up of 84 months, both median survival time (18 versus 50 months), 2-year (43% versus 70%) and 5-year (31% versus 46%) survival rates of positive cases were significantly lower than negative ones [P <0.001; hazard ratio 1.96; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.163.30]. At the multivariate analysis, EGFR overexpression and stage emerged as independent factors for cancer-related mortality.
Conclusion:
In patients with radically resected stage IIIIA NSCLC, EGFR overexpression predicts shorter survival, thus representing a valuable prognostic factor.
Key words: epidermal growth factor receptor, non-small-cell lung cancer, prognostic factors, survival
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Introduction |
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EGFR was found to be overexpressed in both cell lines and samples of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) [35], and associated with increased tumor proliferation, poor differentiation, higher incidence of metastases to lymph nodes and a worse prognosis [6]. Higher rates of EGFR expression were also found in stage III disease [7] and in squamous cell histotype [8, 9]. The mechanism responsible for EGFR overexpression is largely unknown and gene amplification is only rarely involved in NSCLC [10]. The prognostic significance of EGFR remains to be defined: most of the studies analyzing molecular markers are affected by either a retrospective design or by a small sample size with limited statistical power. Therefore, we conducted a prospective study, starting in 1991, to evaluate EGFR expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC) on 130 consecutive surgical specimens from early stage NSCLC patients and to correlate overexpression with long-term survival. In a previous paper [11] we also analyzed overexpression of HER-2/neu in the same population of 130 patients.
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Patients and methods |
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None of the patients received pre-operative chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Adjuvant treatment was limited to thoracic radiotherapy in pN2 cases. All patients were followed up every 3 months for the first 2 years, then on a 6-monthly basis for 3 years. Treatment at relapse was decided individually and included standard chemotherapy or radiotherapy according to progression patterns.
EGFR assay
EGFR expression was determined by IHC (avidin-biotin complex). Specimens from surgically removed tumors were 10% formalin-fixed, then paraffin-embedded, and 5 µm sections were cut from tissue blocks, placed on pre-treated glass slides, then kept at 60°C for 30 min, dewaxed and rehydrated with graded alcohol. An antigen retrieval procedure was performed using a 0.1% pepsin solution at pH 2.25, at 37°C for 20 min. After inhibition of endogenous peroxidase, which occurred after a 30-min treatment with 3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol, EGFR status was assessed using a 1/40 diluted mAb anti-EGFR (Ab-1, Oncogene Sciences, USA) at room temperature for 1 h. Then, 100 µl of a rabbit anti-mouse biotinylated antibody (LSAB, Dako, USA) were added and incubated for 30 min at room temperature. Subsequently, sections were incubated for 45 min with a preformed avidin biotinylated horseradish peroxidase macromolecular complex (Vectastain, Vector Laboratories, USA). Final staining was provided by means of 3,3' diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride. Finally, sections were counterstained with hematoxylin. Negative controls were obtained omitting anti-EGFR antibody and using anti-sheep IgG as a primary antibody. It was considered as positive only cell membrane staining. An average number of 1500 cells per section was evaluated utilizing a semi-quantitative grading system based on four stages (0, no staining; 1+, staining in 110% of considered cells; 2+, staining in 1125% of considered cells; 3+, staining in >25% of considered cells). Microscopic analyses were all performed by the same pathologists (E.L. and P.D.G.). Samples of macroscopically normal lung tissue taken from surgery were also examined for EGFR expression. A cut-off value of 10% positive cells was used in order to avoid inclusion of scattered positivity of the same intensity found in normal bronchial tissue (see Results); this cut-off value was chosen before analyzing the data on the basis of preliminary data on EGFR expression from normal bronchial tissue.
Statistical analysis
The clinical pathological variables considered were sex, age, histotype and pathological TNM stage. Overall survival curves were calculated from the date of surgery to the time of death related to NSCLC or time of last follow-up observation. KaplanMeier curves were calculated for each relevant variable and for EGFR expression. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed with the Cox proportional hazard regression model [14]. In the multivariate model, a backward selection procedure on variable, describing patients and disease characteristics was chosen in order to identify the most parsimonious model for predicting cancer-related mortality. The variable EGFR was then added to the model in order to verify the association between EGFR and mortality after controlling for the baseline variables associated with prognosis. The number of events at the time of analysis allowed 80% power to detect a statistically significant result (5%, two tails) for a hazard ratio of three associated to the group with >10% EGFR positive cells.
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Results |
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Overall, 101 tumors out of 130 (78%) expressed EGFR. When adopting a cut-off value of >10% positive cells (2+, 3+), 48 patients (37%) overexpressed EGFR. EGFR overexpression according to the pathological stage was 20% in stage I patients, 25% in stage II and 50% in stage IIIA: the higher incidence in stage IIIA patients was statistically significant (P <0.03). No correlation was found between EGFR overexpression and histology: it was detected in 30% of squamous cell carcinomas, 38% of adenocarcinomas and 56% of large cell carcinomas.
After a median follow-up time of 84 months, overall 5-year survival was 39%, with a median survival time of 37 months. A higher pathological stage significantly predicted decreased overall survival (P <0.001). In patients overexpressing EGFR, median survival time was significantly shorter: 18 versus 50 months [P <0.02; hazard ratio 1.96; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.163.30]. Two-year and 5-year survival were, respectively, 43% and 31% for EGFR 2+, 3+ patients and 70% and 46% for EGFR 0, 1+ patients (P <0.001) (Figure 1).
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Discussion |
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In 1991, we designed a prospective study to evaluate EGFR expression in radically resected patients with stage IIII NSCLC. In the case of strong positivity at IHC, scored as 2+ to 3+, EGFR overexpression is significantly predictive of a worse prognosis. In our previous paper [11] we reported that overexpression of HER-2/neu, a closely related receptor of the family of EGFR, is a negative prognostic factor in the same population. Concomitant overexpression of the two receptors was observed in 3% of patients from our series: overexpression of either one receptor maintained its negative predictive power (survival data not shown).
In our series no correlation was found between EGFR overexpression and histology: no difference was seen between adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas in contrast with studies in which a higher expression of EGFR was observed in squamous cell carcinomas [7, 18]. However, EGFR was predictive of a worse outcome in adenocarcinomas as well [19]. We found a significantly higher expression of EGFR in stage III when compared to earlier stages. These findings have been reported in other series [7, 20]. A tentative hypothesis could be that expression increases stepwise from pre-cancerous lesions to more advanced stages of cancer [21].
In a recently published meta-analysis [22], over 2000 patients were included and results of 11 studies were compared. IHC was the most frequently used method: a wide range of monoclonal antibodies was used with different dilutions. In eight of the 11 studies using IHC, EGFR overexpression confirmed a worse prognostic significance (hazard ratio 1.13) even if cut-off values are usually resulting from arbitrary choices of investigators. In the review from Nicholson et al. [23] EGFR overexpression confirmed its prognostic value in multiple tumor types, but evidence was weaker in NSCLC. However, as Nicholson et al. suggest [23], the true prognostic significance of EGFR might be underestimated by the fact that in published studies EGFR is assessed as total cellular level rather than its activated form, which is probably the only form affecting prognosis [24]. A further bias is the lack of standardized cut-off points of normal receptor levels and the inclusion of both early and late stages of disease in patient populations.
The heterogeneity of available reports could also be explained by differences in interpreting the intensity of expression and the localization of receptors and by the wide range of methods in use for EGFR detection. IHC relies on subjective judgment which represents an intrinsic limit of the technique: with IHC some authors reported only cell membrane staining [25] as opposed to cytoplasmic staining [19, 26], while others did not report any preferential localization of the receptor [27]. As already seen from HER-2/neu studies [28, 29], differences may arise from using IHC or FISH or probing of DNA or mRNA, which measures either the protein level or the gene amplification. Even a quantitative detection cannot fully define the real drive of EGFR on the tumor proliferation in vivo as mentioned above. Standardization of techniques to determine EGFR overexpression must therefore become a priority in the near future; IHC remains in our opinion the best choice for routine clinical use, even if a universal scoring system is still needed to better compare research results.
Long-term prognosis could also be affected by multiple downstream steps involved in the EGFR signal transduction pathway, as Ras, raf, or MAP kinases.
EGFR is activated by the binding of its ligands: EGF, transforming growth factor alpha (TGF) and HB-EGF (amphiregulin). An autocrine loop sustained by TGF
is another mechanism involved in uncontrolled cellular proliferation [30].
We found that overexpression of EGFR correlates with a more aggressive behavior of the tumor, leading to shorter survival. However, it is not clearly defined if this will translate into a higher sensitivity to agents targeting EGFR [31].
In a series of 169 patients, EGFR overexpression was not found to be prognostic but became predictive of a worse outcome when associated with expression of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) [32]. A possible mechanism to explain this finding is that in vitro EGFR stimulation leads to activation of ras with subsequent up-regulation of MMP-9 [33].
At the time of the study, we did not plan to investigate the impact of mutant EGFR (EGFRvIII), which seems to define a more aggressive phenotype [34]. The EGFRvIII is a truncated EGFR that lacks extracellular domains I and II with a constitutively activated tyrosine kinase independent of ligand interaction [35]. Multiple variables affect the transforming power of EGFR, ranging from modulation of phosphorylation of EGFR kinase substrates to the presence of receptor mutant phenotypes, to the impact of heterodimeric coupling [36] or of more distal steps of the signal transduction pathway. The most recent clinical data showed that EGFR targeted therapies could not be dependent on intensity of expression to be effective [37, 38], as opposed to previous insights from head and neck cancer cell lines [39].
In conclusion, EGFR seems to be a valuable prognostic marker in stage IIII NSCLC. Evaluation of EGFR expression, as well as other members of the EGF family of receptors, could contribute to a molecular classification of lung cancer and could define a subset of patients at higher risk for relapse after radical resection, who could hopefully benefit from adjuvant treatment with targeted agents against EGFR.
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Acknowledgements |
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FOOTNOTES |
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