Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Somatic molecular analysis augments cytologic evaluation of pancreatic cyst fluids as a diagnostic tool

Ali Sakhdari, Parnian Ahmadi Moghaddam, Chi Young Ok, Otto Walter, Keith Tomaszewicz, Mandi-Lee Caporelli, Xiuling Meng, Jennifer LaFemina, Giles Whalen, Edward Belkin, Jaroslav Zivny, Wahid Wassef, Bruce A. Woda, Lloyd M. Hutchinson _ and Ediz F. Cosar

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Oncotarget. 2019; 10:4026-4037. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.26999

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Abstract

Ali Sakhdari1,5, Parnian Ahmadi Moghaddam1,4,6, Chi Young Ok1,5, Otto Walter1, Keith Tomaszewicz1, Mandi-Lee Caporelli1, Xiuling Meng1, Jennifer LaFemina2, Giles Whalen2, Edward Belkin3, Jaroslav Zivny3, Wahid Wassef3, Bruce A. Woda1, Lloyd M. Hutchinson1 and Ediz F. Cosar1

1 University of Massachusetts Medical School, Department of Pathology, Worcester, MA, USA

2 University of Massachusetts Medical School, Department of Surgery, Worcester, MA, USA

3 University of Massachusetts Medical School, Department of Medicine, Worcester, MA, USA

4 Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Pathology, Boston, MA, USA

5 MD Anderson Cancer Center, Department of Hematopathology, Houston, TX, USA

6 University of Texas, Health Science Center, Department of Pathology, Houston, TX, USA

Correspondence to:

Lloyd M. Hutchinson,email: [email protected]

Keywords: pancreatic cyst classification; non-diagnostic cytology; molecular next generation sequencing

Received: February 08, 2019     Accepted: May 20, 2019     Published: June 18, 2019

ABSTRACT

Objective: Better tools are needed for early diagnosis and classification of pancreatic cystic lesions (PCL) to trigger intervention before neoplastic precursor lesions progress to adenocarcinoma. We evaluated the capacity of molecular analysis to improve the accuracy of cytologic diagnosis for PCL with an emphasis on non-diagnostic/negative specimens.

Design: In a span of 7 years, at a tertiary care hospital, 318 PCL endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspirations (EUS-FNA) were evaluated by cytologic examination and molecular analysis. Mucinous PCL were identified based on a clinical algorithm and 46 surgical resections were used to verify this approach. The mutation allele frequency (MAF) of commonly altered genes (BRAF, CDKN2A, CTNNB1, GNAS, RAS, PIK3CA, PTEN, SMAD4, TP53 and VHL) was evaluated for their ability to identify and grade mucinous PCL.

Results: Cytology showed a diagnostic sensitivity of 43.5% for mucinous PCL due in part to the impact of non-diagnostic (28.8%) and negative (50.5%) specimens. Incorporating an algorithmic approach or molecular analysis markedly increased the accuracy of cytologic evaluation. Detection of mucinous PCL by molecular analysis was 93.3% based on the detection of KRAS and/or GNAS gene mutations (p = 0.0001). Additional genes provided a marginal improvement in sensitivity but were associated with cyst type (e.g. VHL) and grade (e.g. SMAD4). In the surgical cohort, molecular analysis and the proposed algorithm showed comparable sensitivity (88.9% vs. 100%).

Conclusions: Incorporating somatic molecular analysis in the cytologic evaluation of EUS-FNA increases diagnostic accuracy for detection, classification and grading of PCL. This approach has the potential to improve patient management.


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