Journal of Translational Medicine (Mar 2022)

Clinical validation of a 90-gene expression test for tumor tissue of origin diagnosis: a large-scale multicenter study of 1417 patients

  • Wei Sun,
  • Wei Wu,
  • Qifeng Wang,
  • Qian Yao,
  • Qin Feng,
  • Yue Wang,
  • Yu Sun,
  • Yunying Liu,
  • Qian Lai,
  • Gu Zhang,
  • Peng Qi,
  • Yifeng Sun,
  • Chenhui Qian,
  • Wanli Ren,
  • Zhengzhi Luo,
  • Jinying Chen,
  • Hongying Wang,
  • Qinghua Xu,
  • Xiaoyan Zhou,
  • Wenyong Sun,
  • Dongmei Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-022-03318-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Once malignancy tumors were diagnosed, the determination of tissue origin and tumor type is critical for clinical management. Although the significant advance in imaging techniques and histopathological approaches, the diagnosis remains challenging in patients with metastatic and poorly differentiated or undifferentiated tumors. Gene expression profiling has been demonstrated the ability to classify multiple tumor types. The present study aims to assess the performance of a 90-gene expression test for tumor classification (i.e. the determination of tumor tissue of origin) in real clinical settings. Methods Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples and associated clinicopathologic information were collected from three cancer centers between January 2016 and January 2021. A total of 1417 specimens that met quality control criteria (RNA quality, tumor cell content ≥ 60% and so on) were analyzed by the 90-gene expression test to identify the tumor tissue of origin. The performance was evaluated by comparing the test results with histopathological diagnosis. Results The 1417 samples represent 21 main tumor types classified by common tissue origins and anatomic sites. Overall, the 90-gene expression test reached an accuracy of 94.4% (1338/1417, 95% CI: 0.93 to 0.96). Among different tumor types, sensitivities were ranged from 74.2% (head&neck tumor) to 100% (adrenal carcinoma, mesothelioma, and prostate cancer). Sensitivities for the most prevalent cancers of lung, breast, colorectum, and gastroesophagus are 95.0%, 98.4%, 93.9%, and 90.6%, respectively. Moreover, specificities for all 21 tumor types are greater than 99%. Conclusions These findings showed robust performance of the 90-gene expression test for identifying the tumor tissue of origin and support the use of molecular testing as an adjunct to tumor classification, especially to those poorly differentiated or undifferentiated tumors in clinical practice.

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